RICE ASPARTIC PROTEINASE, ORYZASIN, EXPRESSED DURING SEED RIPENING AND GERMINATION, HAS A GENE ORGANIZATION DISTINCT FROM THOSE OF ANIMAL AND MICROBIAL ASPARTIC PROTEINASES
The gene organization and nucleotide sequence of an aspartic proteinase (AP) of plant origin were first disclosed by cDNA and genomic DNA cloning of a rice AP (oryzasin). The deduced amino acid sequence of oryzasin 1 was significantly similar to those of other APs (34-85%), with highest similarity (85%) to barley AP (HvAP). Oryzasin 1, as well as HvAP, is distinct from animal and microbial APs in that the plant APs contain a unique 104-amino-acid insertion in the C-terminal region. The oryzasin 1 gene spans approximately 6.6 kbp and is composed of 14 exons and 13 introns. The exon-intron organization of the oryzasin 1 gene is totally different from those of genes for animal and microbial APs such as human cathepsin D, rat renin, bovine chymosin, aspergillopepsin A of Aspergillus awamori, proteinase A of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and rhizopuspepsin of Rhizopus niveus, despite the fact that oryzasin 1 shows overall sequence similarity to these APs.