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Balsamin, a novel ribosome-inactivating protein from the seeds of Balsam apple Momordica balsamina

journal contribution
posted on 2012-08-01, 00:00 authored by I Kaur, S Yadav, G Hariprasad, R Gupta, A Srinivasan, J Batra, Munish PuriMunish Puri
Plant seeds, a rich source of proteins, are considered important for their application as functional ingredients in a food system. A novel ribosome-inactivating protein (RIP), balsamin was purified from the seeds of Balsam apple, Momordica balsamina. Balsamin was purified by ion exchange chromatography on CM Sepharose and gel filtration on superdex-75. It has a molecular weight of 28 kDa as shown by SDS-PAGE analysis. Balsamin inhibits protein synthesis in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate-based cell free translation assay with an IC50 of 90.6 ng ml−1. It has RNA N-glycosidase activity and releases a 400-base long fragment termed the Endo fragment from 28S rRNA in the same manner as does saporin-6 from Saponaria officinalis. The N-terminal sequence analysis of the first 12 amino acids of balsamin revealed that it shares 83% similarity with type I RIP α-MMC from Momordica charantia and 50% similarity with β-MMC (from Momordica charantia), bryodin I (from Bryonia dioica) and luffin a (from Luffa cylindrica). Balsamin was further characterized by mass spectrometry. CD spectroscopic studies indicate that secondary structure of balsamin contains helix (23.5%), β-strand (24.6%), turn (20%) and random coil (31.9%). Thus RIPs activity expressed in vegetables like Momordica sp. advocates its usage in diet.

History

Journal

Amino acids

Volume

43

Issue

2

Pagination

973 - 981

Publisher

Springer Wien

Location

Vienna, Austria

ISSN

0939-4451

eISSN

1438-2199

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Springer-Verlag