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The X-ray crystal structure and biochemical analysis of a native basic pathogenesis-related-1 protein from Mucuna sempervirens (Fabaceae) floral nectar.

Zha HG, Cui P, Yu Y, Song YQ, Cheng MH

Plant Signaling

The proteins plants pump into their flowers may be doing jobs we haven't imagined yet — and understanding them could reshape how breeders think about pollinator attraction, nectar chemistry, and disease resistance in flowering vines and legumes.

Plants make a family of small proteins famous for helping them fight off diseases. Researchers found one of these proteins not in a sick leaf, but in the sweet nectar of a tropical vine's flower — and when they looked closely at its shape, it formed a paired structure and couldn't do any of the disease-fighting things its relatives do. That suggests this protein has been 'repurposed' by the plant for some completely different function in the flower, possibly related to pollination or nectar chemistry.

Key Findings

1

The protein MsPR-1b forms a homodimer (two identical units paired together) — the first native PR-1 protein ever crystallized directly from its natural plant source, resolved at 2.0 Å resolution.

2

Despite belonging to a protein family associated with immune defense, MsPR-1b shows no detectable lipid-binding ability and no direct antimicrobial activity.

3

The protein is expressed almost exclusively in the nectary (nectar-producing tissue), is not glycosylated, and has a basic character (pI 9.4, 15,134 Da), distinguishing it from typical acidic defense-related PR-1 proteins.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Scientists solved the 3D structure of a plant immune protein found in flower nectar — and discovered it looks and behaves nothing like its pathogen-fighting cousins, suggesting it has an entirely different, still-unknown job in the plant.

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Abstract Preview

Pathogenesis-Related 1 (PR-1) proteins are small secreted proteins that typically accumulate upon pathogen attack and serve as hallmarks of plant immune activation. Despite their widespread use as ...

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Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 12 other discoveries — Mucuna, velvet bean plant-signaling, pollinators, medicinal-plants +2 more 5 related articles

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