Abstract
We have cloned and sequenced a 650-nucleotide cDNA from barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) aleurone layers encoding a protein that is closely related to a known α-amylase inhibitor from Indian finger millet (Eleusine coracana Gaertn.), and that has homologies to certain plant trypsin inhibitors. mRNA for this probable amylase/protease inhibitor (PAPI) is expressed primarily in aleurone tissue during late development of the grain, as compared to that for the amylase/subtilisin inhibitor, which is expressed in endosperm during the peak of storage-protein synthesis. PAPI mRNA is present at high levels in aleurone tissue of desiccated, mature grain, and in incubated aleurone layers prepared from rehydrated mature seeds. Its expression in those layers is not affected by either abscisic acid or gibberellic acid, hormones that, respectively, increase and decrease the abundance of mRNA for the amylase/subtilisin inhibitor. PAPI mRNA is almost as abundant in gibberellic acid-treated aleurone layers as that for α-amylase, and PAPI protein is synthesized in that tissue at levels that are comparable to α-amylase. PAPI protein is secreted from aleurone layers into the incubation medium.