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Changes in the Amount of Complex Lipids in the Seeds and in the Pericarp during the Development of Ivy Fruit (Hedera helix)
Authors:MICHÈLE GROSBOIS
Institution:Laboratoire de Physiologie Cellulaire, E.R.A. 323, 12, Rue Cuvier, F-75005 Paris
Abstract:By a combination of thin-layer chromatography and gas liquid chromatography, a complete study of the development of the different lipid classes and of their fatty acids, during the development of the fruit of Hedera helix L., the English Ivy, has been achieved. In any part of the fruit observed, at any particular stage, the phospholipids and the neutral lipids are the most abundant lipid classes. They accumulate during the entire process of maturation, whereas significant changes occur in their relative proportions, phospholipids being largely dominant until fruit blackening. The accumulation of fatty acids during maturation is characterized by large amounts of C18:1 in the neutral lipids, especially in the seed, where petroselinic acid (C18:1Δ6) reaches 86% of the total fatty acids. To a smaller extent, the phospholipids also accumulate and thus have the character of reserve molecules. However, their composition remains more stable, which relates them to the “structural lipids” such as galactolipids that maintain their characteristic fatty acid composition, despite the radical changes occurring in the fatty acid metabolism during fruit ripening.
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