Abstract
In the early stage of ripening of cherry-tomato fruits (Lycopersicon esculentum var. cherry), the lectin activity increased logarithmically and reached a plateau at day 10 after flowering. During purification of lectin from ripe and unripe fruits, a 42-kDa protein was found abundantly in unripe fruits. The protein cross-reacted with anti-cherry-tomato-lectin serum, retained chitinbinding ability, but showed no lectin activity. Comparative studies between the structure of the lectin and the 42-kDa protein were done. N-Terminal amino acid sequences of the lectin, peptides derived from the S-pyridylethylated lectin, and fragments generated by limited proteolysis of the native lectin showed that the lectin was comprised of three domains, Hyp-rich, Cysrich, and Gln-rich, and the alignment of them was as this order from the N-terminus. Studies on the 42-kDa protein showed that it contained two of the three domains, Cys-rich and Gln-rich, but the amino acid sequence analysis showed that the protein should be a product of another gene.