American Chemical Society
Browse

Carnivorous Nutrition in Pitcher Plants (<i>Nepenthes</i> spp.) via an Unusual Complement of Endogenous Enzymes

Download (24.82 kB)
dataset
posted on 2016-07-20, 00:00 authored by Linda Lee, Ye Zhang, Brittany Ozar, Christoph W. Sensen, David C. Schriemer
Plants belonging to the genus <i>Nepenthes</i> are carnivorous, using specialized pitfall traps called “pitchers” that attract, capture, and digest insects as a primary source of nutrients. We have used RNA sequencing to generate a cDNA library from the <i>Nepenthes</i> pitchers and applied it to mass spectrometry-based identification of the enzymes secreted into the pitcher fluid using a nonspecific digestion strategy superior to trypsin in this application. This first complete catalog of the pitcher fluid subproteome includes enzymes across a variety of functional classes. The most abundant proteins present in the secreted fluid are proteases, nucleases, peroxidases, chitinases, a phosphatase, and a glucanase. Nitrogen recovery involves a particularly rich complement of proteases. In addition to the two expected aspartic proteases, we discovered three novel nepenthensins, two prolyl endopeptidases that we name neprosins, and a putative serine carboxypeptidase. Additional proteins identified are relevant to pathogen-defense and secretion mechanisms. The full complement of acid-stable enzymes discovered in this study suggests that carnivory in the genus <i>Nepenthes</i> can be sustained by plant-based mechanisms alone and does not absolutely require bacterial symbiosis.

History