Turnover of Storage Protein in Seeds of Soya Bean and Pea |
| |
Authors: | MADISON J T; THOMPSON J F; MUENSTER A E |
| |
Institution: | U.S. Plant, Soil and Nutrition Laboratory, Agricultural Research, Science and Education Administration, U.S. Department of Agriculture Ithaca, New York, 14853, U.S.A. |
| |
Abstract: | We were interested in determining whether the low protein contentof pea seeds (Pisum sativum L.) as compared to soya bean seeds(Glycine max L. Merrill) might be due to faster degradationof the pea storage proteins during development of the seed.Pea and soya bean cotyledons were subjected to a pulse-chaseexperiment using 3H]glycine in in-vitro cultures. In peas,legumin had a half-life of 146 days, while vicilin had a half-lifeof 39 days. There was no measureable degradation of soya beanstorage proteins. Even with the pea storage proteins, the half-liveswere so much longer than the maturation time of seeds that degradationof storage proteins could not account for the lower proteincontent of peas as compared to soya beans. The validity of theseresults was indicated by the finding that non-storage proteinshad much shorter half-lives and that omission of a carbon ora nitrogen source greatly accelerated degradation. Labelledglycine was found to be a good probe for protein turnover studiesbecause it was very rapidly metabolized. Glycine max L. Merrill, soya bean, Pisum sativum, L. pea, protein turnover, storage proteins, legumin, vicilin |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 Oxford 等数据库收录! |
|