首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Schuurink RC  Sedee NJ  Wang M 《Plant physiology》1992,100(4):1834-1839
The relationship between barley grain dormancy and gibberellic acid (GA3) responsiveness of aleurone layers has been investigated. Barley (Hordeum distichum L. cvs Triumph and Kristina) grains were matured under defined conditions in a phytotron. Grains of Triumph plants grown under long-day/warm conditions had lower dormancy levels than grains of plants grown under short-day/cool conditions. Aleurone layers isolated from grains of long-day Triumph plants secreted more α-amylase and had a higher responsiveness to GA3 as measured by α-amylase secretion. Storage of the grains increased both the percentage of germination and the responsiveness of the aleurone to GA3. Use of different sterilization methods to break dormancy confirmed the correlation between germination percentage and aleurone layer GA3 responsiveness. The response of embryoless Triumph grains to GA3 was lower than that of the isolated aleurone layers, suggesting a role of the starchy endosperm in regulating the GA3 response of the aleurone layer. Grains of the cultivar Kristina harvested from short day- and long day-grown plants lacked dormancy, and their isolated aleurone layers had a similar responsiveness to GA3 as measured by α-amylase secretion. The data indicate that the physiological state of the aleurone layers contributes to the percentage germination of the grains.  相似文献   

2.
The specific measurement of α-amylase activity in crude plant extracts is difficult because of the presence of β-amylases which directly interfere with most assay methods. Methods compared in this study include heat treatment at 70°C for 20 min, HgCl2 treatment, and the use of the α-amylase specific substrate starch azure. In comparing alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.), soybeans (Glycine max [L.] Merr.), and malted barley (Hordeum vulgare L.), the starch azure assay was the only satisfactory method for all tissues. While β-amylase can liberate no color alone, over 10 International units per milliliter β-amylase activity has a stimulatory effect on the rate of color release. This stimulation becomes constant (about 4-fold) at β-amylase activities over 1,000 International units per milliliter. Two starch azure procedures were developed to eliminate β-amylase interference: (a) the dilution procedure, the serial dilution of samples until β-amylase levels are below levels that interfere; (b) the β-amylase saturation procedure, addition of exogenous β-amylase to increase endogenous β-amylase activity to saturating levels. Both procedures yield linear calibrations up to 0.3 International units per milliliter. These two procedures produced statistically identical results with most tissues, but not for all tissues. Differences between the two methods with some plant tissues was attributed to inaccuracy with the dilution procedure in tissues high in β-amylase activity or inhibitory effects of the commercial β-amylase. The β-amylase saturation procedure was found to be preferable with most species. The heat treatment was satisfactory only for malted barley, as α-amylases in alfalfa and soybeans are heat labile. Whereas HgCl2 proved to be a potent inhibitor of β-amylase activity at concentrations of 10 to 100 micromolar, these concentrations also partially inhibited α-amylase in barley malt. The reported α-amylase activities in crude enzyme extracts from a number of plant species are apparently the first specific measurements reported for any plant tissues other than germinating cereals.  相似文献   

3.
α-Amylase activities in extracts of different parts of barley grain (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) were low after 1 day of germination at 20°C, but they began to increase afterwards. In the scutellum and the aleurone layer, the increases were small, but in the starchy endosperm a great increase took place between days 1 and 6.

When the aleurone layers were separated from germinating whole grains and incubated in 10 millimolar CaCl2, the α-amylase activity in the medium increased linearly for about 30 to 60 minutes, indicating secretion. The activity inside the aleurone layer decreased only slightly during the incubation, indicating that secretion of α-amylase was accompanied by synthesis. The rates of secretion in vitro by the aleurone layers separated at different stages of germination corresponded rather well to the rate of accumulation of α-amylase activity in the starchy endosperm in a whole grain.

Scutella separated after 1 day of germination released small amounts of α-amylase activity into 10 millimolar CaCl2. This release was linear for at least 1 hour and did not occur at 0°C; it is therefore likely to be due to secretion. At later stages of germination, the secretion by the scutella was slower than at day 1 and the total secretion accounted for only 5 to 10% of the increase of α-amylase activity in the starchy endosperm in a whole grain.

Since the times from the separation of the parts of the grain to the beginning of the secretion assay (10-40 minutes) as well as the duration of the assay itself (20-60 minutes) were short, the rates of secretion by the separated grain parts are likely to represent those in an intact grain. The results indicate therefore that at least in the conditions used the bulk of the total α-amylase in the starchy endosperm is secreted by the aleurone layer, the contribution by the scutellum being only 5 to 10% of the total activity.

  相似文献   

4.
The effect of temperature on α-amylase synthesis and secretion from barley (c.v. Himalaya) half-seeds and aleurone layers is reported. Barley half-seeds incubated at 15 C in gibberellic acid (GA) concentrations of 0.5 and 5 micromolar for 16 hours do not release α-amylase. Similarly, isolated aleurone layers of barley do not release α-amylase when incubated for 2 or 4 hours at temperatures of 15 C or below following 12 hours incubation at 25 C at GA concentrations from 50 nanomolar to 50 micromolar. There is an interaction between temperature and GA concentration for the process of α-amylase release from aleurone layers; thus, with increasing GA concentration, there is an increase in the Q10 of this process. A thermal gradient bar was used to resolve the temperature at which the rate of α-amylase release changes; thermal discontinuity was observed between 19 and 21 C. The time course of the response of aleurone tissue to temperature was determined using a continuous monitoring apparatus. Results show that the effect of low temperature is detectable within minutes, whereas recovery from exposure to low temperature is also rapid. Although temperature has a marked effect on the amount of α-amylase released from isolated aleurone layers, it does not significantly affect the accumulation of α-amylase within the tissue. At all GA concentrations above 0.5 nanomolar, the level of extractable α-amylase is unaffected by temperatures between 10 and 28 C. It is concluded that the effect of temperature on α-amylase production from barley aleurone layers is primarily on the process of enzyme secretion.  相似文献   

5.
The wild ancestor of cultivated barley, Hordeum vulgare subsp. spontaneum (K. Koch) A. & Gr. (H. spontaneum), is a source of wide genetic diversity, including traits that are important for malting quality. A high β-amylase trait was previously identified in H. spontaneum strains from Israel, and transferred into the backcross progeny of a cross with the domesticated barley cv Adorra. We have used Southern-blot analysis and β-amy1 gene characterization to demonstrate that the high β-amylase trait in the backcross line is co-inherited with the β-amy1 gene from the H. spontaneum parent. We have analyzed the β-amy1 gene organization in various domesticated and wild-type barley strains and identified three distinct β-amy1 alleles. Two of these β-amy1 alleles were present in modern barley, one of which was specifically found in good malting barley cultivars. The third allele, linked with high grain β-amylase activity, was found only in a H. spontaneum strain from the Judean foothills in Israel. The sequences of three isolated β-amy1 alleles are compared. The involvement of specific intron III sequences, in particular a 126-bp palindromic insertion, in the allele-dependent expression of β-amylase activity in barley grain is proposed.  相似文献   

6.
β-Amylase of maize (Zea mays L.) caryopses was studied during development and germination by means of enzymic, electrophoretic, and immunochemical techniques. β-Amylase activity increased during caryopsis development to a maximum value at the beginning of the water content plateau (at this stage the enzyme was located primarily within the pericarp) and then decreased. Almost no β-amylase (activity or antigen) was found in either free or bound forms in the mature maize caryopsis. The activity increased again during seedling growth and reached much higher values. Both the aleurone layer (to a major extent) and the scutellum produced and secreted β-amylase during germination, the secretion being stimulated by Ca2+. No posttranslational modification of the enzyme was detected during germination. The molecular specific activity of the enzyme remained unchanged during the observed periods, indicating that the regulation of the activity is based essentially on protein turnover. The enzyme from developing and germinating caryopses was found to be identical in terms of antigenicity, isoelectric point, and molecular mass to the β-amylases extracted from the roots and the leaves of the maize seedling. The maize β-amylase resembles in all respects the ubiquitous β-amylase described for rye and wheat, whereas the major β-amylase of those cereals appears to be lacking in the maize caryopsis.  相似文献   

7.
Moll BA  Jones RL 《Plant physiology》1982,70(4):1149-1155
The secretion of α-amylase from single isolated (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) aleurone layers was studied in an automated flow-through apparatus. The apparatus, consisting of a modified sample analyzer linked to a chart recorder, automatically samples the flow-through medium at 1 minute intervals and assays for the presence of α-amylase. The release of α-amylase from aleurone layers begins after 5 to 6 hours of exposure to gibberellic acid and reaches a maximum rate after 10 to 12 hours. The release of α-amylase shows a marked dependence on Ca2+, and in the absence of Ca2+ it is only 20% of that in the presence of 10 millimolar Ca2+. Withdrawal of Ca2+ from the flow-through medium results in the immediate cessation of enzyme release and addition of Ca2+ causes immediate resumption of the release process. The effect of Ca2+ is concentration-dependent, being half-maximal at 1 millimolar Ca2+ and saturated at 10 millimolar Ca2+. Ruthenium red, which blocks Ca2+ but not Mg2+ efflux from barley aleurone layers, renders α-amylase release insensitive to Ca2+ withdrawal. Inhibitors of respiratory metabolism cause a burst of α-amylase release which lasts for 0.5 to 5 hours. Following this phase of enhanced α-amylase release, the rate of release declines to zero. Pretreatment of aleurone layers with HCl prior to incubation in HCN also causes a burst of α-amylase release, indicating that the inhibitor is affecting the secretion of α-amylase and not its movement through the cell wall. The rapid inhibition of α-amylase release upon incubation of aleurone layers at low temperature (5°C) or in 0.5 molar mannitol also indicates that enzyme release is dependent on a metabolically linked process and is not diffusion-limited. This conclusion is supported by cytochemical observations which show that, although the cell wall matrix of aleurone layers undergoes extensive digestion after gibberellin treatment, the innermost part of the cell wall is not degraded and could influence enzyme release.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of gibberellic acid (GA3) and calcium ions on the production of α-amylase and acid phosphatase by isolated aleurone layers of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) were studied. Aleurone layers not previously exposed to GA3 or Ca2+ show qualitative and quantitative changes in hydrolase production following incubation in either GA3 or Ca2+ or both. Incubation in H2O or Ca2+ results in the production of low levels of α-amylase or acid phosphatase. The addition of GA3 to the incubation medium causes a 10- to 20-fold increase in the amounts of these enzymes released from the tissue, and addition of Ca2+ at 10 millimolar causes a further 8- to 9-fold increase in α-amylase release and a 75% increase in phosphatase release. Production of α-amylase isoenzymes is also modified by the levels of GA3 and Ca2+ in the incubation medium. α-Amylase 2 is produced under all conditions of incubation, while α-amylase 1 appears only when layers are incubated in GA3 or GA3 plus Ca2+. The synthesis of α-amylases 3 and 4 requires the presence of both GA3 and Ca2+ in the incubation medium. Laurell rocket immuno-electrophoresis shows that two distinct groups of α-amylase antigens are present in incubation media of aleurone layers incubated with both GA3 and Ca2+, while only one group of antigens is found in media of layers incubated in GA3 alone. Strontium ions can be substituted for Ca2+ in increasing hydrolase production, although higher concentrations of Sr2+ are required for maximal response. We conclude that GA3 is required for the production of α-amylase 1 and that both GA3 and either Ca2+ or Sr2+ are required for the production of isoenzymes 3 and 4 of barley aleurone α-amylase.  相似文献   

9.
The most abundant β-amylase (EC 3.2.1.2) in pea (Pisum sativum L.) was purified greater than 880-fold from epicotyls of etiolated germinating seedlings by anion exchange and gel filtration chromatography, glycogen precipitation, and preparative electrophoresis. The electrophoretic mobility and relative abundance of this β-amylase are the same as that of an exoamylase previously reported to be primarily vacuolar. The enzyme was determined to be a β-amylase by end product analysis and by its inability to hydrolyze β-limit dextrin and to release dye from starch azure. Pea β-amylase is an approximate 55 to 57 kilodalton monomer with a pl of 4.35, a pH optimum of 6.0 (soluble starch substrate), an Arrhenius energy of activation of 6.28 kilocalories per mole, and a Km of 1.67 milligrams per milliliter (soluble starch). The enzyme is strongly inhibited by heavy metals, p-chloromer-curiphenylsulfonic acid and N-ethylmaleimide, but much less strongly by iodoacetamide and iodoacetic acid, indicating cysteinyl sulfhydryls are not directly involved in catalysis. Pea β-amylase is competitively inhibited by its end product, maltose, with a Ki of 11.5 millimolar. The enzyme is partially inhibited by Schardinger maltodextrins, with α-cyclohexaamylose being a stronger inhibitor than β-cycloheptaamylose. Moderately branched glucans (e.g. amylopectin) were better substrates for pea β-amylase than less branched or non-branched (amyloses) or highly branched (glycogens) glucans. The enzyme failed to hydrolyze native starch grains from pea and glucans smaller than maltotetraose. The mechanism of pea β-amylase is the multichain type. Possible roles of pea β-amylase in cellular glucan metabolism are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of gibberellic acid and Ca2+ on the accumulation of α-amylase mRNAs in aleurone layers of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) was studied using cDNA clones containing sequences of mRNAs for the high and low isoelectric point (pI) α-amylases. There is no significant hybridization between the two α-amylase cDNA clones under the hybridization and washing conditions employed. These clones were therefore used to monitor levels of mRNAs for high and low pI α-amylases. It is shown that although the synthesis of the high pI α-amylase proteins depends on the presence of Ca2+ in the incubation medium, the accumulation of mRNA for this group occurs to the same degree in the presence or the absence of Ca2+. The accumulation of low pI α-amylase mRNA is also not affected by the presence or absence of Ca2+ in the incubation medium. These results establish gibberellic acid, not Ca2+, as the principal regulator of α-amylase mRNA accumulation in barley aleurone, while Ca2+ controls high pI α-amylase synthesis at a later step in the biosynthetic pathway.  相似文献   

11.
An endogenous alpha-amylase inhibitor in barley kernels   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Barley (Hordeum distichum cv Klages) kernels were shown to contain a factor that converted malted barley α-amylase II to the α-amylase III form. After purification by ammonium sulfate fractionation, ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, and gel-filtration on Bio Gel P60, the factor gave a single band of protein on isoelectric focusing. The purified factor inhibited hydrolysis of soluble starch by α-amylase II from malted barley and germinated wheat (Triticum aestivum cv Neepawa). However, α-amylase I from these cereals was not affected. The inhibitor was not dialyzable and was retained by a PM 10 ultrafiltration membrane suggesting a molecular weight greater than 10,000 daltons. Heat treatment of the inhibitor at 70°C for 15 minutes at pH 5.5 and 8.0 resulted in considerable loss of inhibitory activity.  相似文献   

12.
Posttranslational modifications that give rise to multiple forms of α-amylase (EC 3.2.1.1) in barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) were studied. When analyzed by denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, barley α-amylase has a molecular mass of 43 to 44 kilodaltons, but isoelectric focusing resolves the enzyme into a large number of isoforms. To precisely identify these isoforms, we propose a system of classification based on their isoelectric points (pl). α-Amylases with pls of approximately 5, previously referred to as low pl or Amy1 isoforms, have been designated HAMY1, and α-amylases with pls of approximately 6, referred to as high pl or Amy2, are designated HAMY2. Individual isoforms of HAMY1 and HAMY2 are identified by their pls. For example, the most acidic α-amylase synthesized and secreted by barley aleurone layers is designated HAMY1(4.56). Some of the diversity in the pls of barley α-amylases arises from posttranslational modifications of the enzyme. We report the isolation of a factor from barley aleurone layers and incubation media that can modify HAMY1 isoforms in vitro. This factor has a molecular mass between 30 and 50 kilodaltons, and it can catalyze the conversion of HAMY1(4.90) and HAMY1(4.64) to isoforms 4.72 and 4.56, respectively. The in vitro conversion of HAMY1 isoforms by the factor is favored by pH values of approximately 5 and is inhibited at approximately pH 7. The level of this factor in aleurone layers and incubation media is not affected by treatment of the tissue with gibberellic acid. The amylase-modifying activity from barley will also modify α-amylases isolated from human saliva and porcine pancreas. An activity that can modify HAMY1 isoforms in vitro has also been isolated from Onozuka R10 cellulase. Because the activity isolated from barley lowers the pl of α-amylase from barley, human saliva, and porcine pancreas, we speculate that it is a deamidase.  相似文献   

13.
Enzymes of starch metabolism in the developing rice grain   总被引:7,自引:5,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The levels of starch, soluble sugars, protein, and enzymes involved in starch metabolism—α-amylase, β-amylase, phosphorylase, Q-enzyme, R-enzyme, and starch synthetase —were assayed in dehulled developing rice grains (Oryzasativa L., variety IR8). Phosphorylase, Q-enzyme, and R-enzyme had peak activities 10 days after flowering, whereas α- and β-amylases had maximal activities 14 days after flowering. Starch synthetase bound to the starch granule increased in activity up to 21 days after flowering. These enzymes (except the starch synthetases) were also detected by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Their activity in grains at the midmilky stage (8-10 days after flowering) was determined in five pairs of lines with low and high amylose content from different crosses. The samples had similar levels of amylases, phosphorylase, R-enzyme, and Q-enzyme. The samples consistently differed in their levels of starch synthetase bound to the starch granule, which was proportional to amylose content. Granule-bound starch synthetase may be responsible for the integrity of amylose in the developing starch granule.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Sun Z  Henson CA 《Plant physiology》1990,94(1):320-327
The initial hydrolysis of native (unboiled) starch granules in germinating cereal kernels is considered to be due to α-amylases. We report that barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) seed α-glucosidases (EC 3.2.1.20) can hydrolyze native starch granules isolated from barley kernels and can do so at rates comparable to those of the predominant α-amylase isozymes. Two α-glucosidase charge isoforms were used individually and in combination with purified barley α-amylases to study in vitro starch digestion. Dramatic synergism, as much as 10.7-fold, of native starch granule hydrolysis, as determined by reducing sugar production, occurred when high pl α-glucosidase was combined with either high or low pl α-amylase. Synergism was also found when low pl α-glucosidase was combined with α-amylases. Scanning electron micrographs revealed that starch granule degradation by α-amylases alone occurred specifically at the equatorial grooves of lenticular granules. Granules hydrolyzed by combinations of α-glucosidases and α-amylases exhibited larger and more numerous holes on granule surfaces than did those granules attacked by α-amylase alone. As the presence of α-glucosidases resulted in more areas being susceptible to hydrolysis, we propose that this synergism is due, in part, to the ability of the α-glucosidases to hydrolyze glucosidic bonds other than α-1,4- and α-1,6- that are present at the granule surface, thereby eliminating bonds which were barriers to hydrolysis by α-amylases. Since both α-glucosidase and α-amylase are synthesized in aleurone cells during germination and secreted to the endosperm, the synergism documented here may function in vivo as well as in vitro.  相似文献   

16.
The amylases of the second leaves of barley seedlings (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Betzes) were resolved into eight isozymes by isoelectric focusing, seven of which were β-amylase and the other, α-amylase. The α-amylase had the same isoelectric point as one of the gibberellin-induced α-amylase isozymes in the aleurone layer. This and other enzyme characteristics indicated that the leaf isozyme corresponded to the type A aleurone α-amylase (low pI group). Crossing experiments indicated that leaf and type A aleurone isozymes resulted from expression of the same genes.

In unwatered seedlings, leaf α-amylase increased as leaf water potential decreased and ABA increased. Water stress had no effect on β-amylase. α-Amylase occurred uniformly along the length of the leaf but β-amylase was concentrated in the basal half of the leaf. Cell fractionation studies indicated that none of the leaf α-amylase occurred inside chloroplasts.

Leaf radiolabeling experiments followed by extraction of α-amylase by affinity chromatography and immunoprecipitation showed that increase of α-amylase activity involved synthesis of the enzyme. However, water stress caused no major change in total protein synthesis. Hybridization of a radiolabeled α-amylase-related cDNA clone to size fractionated RNA showed that water-stressed leaves contained much more α-amylase mRNA than unstressed plants. The results of these and other studies indicate that regulation of gene expression may be a component in water-stress induced metabolic changes.

  相似文献   

17.
An inhibitor of malted barley (Hordeum vulgare cv Conquest) α-amylase II was purified 125-fold from a crude extract of barley kernels by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, and gel filtration on Bio-Gel P 60. The inhibitor was a protein with an approximate molecular weight of 20,000 daltons and an isoelectric point of 7.3. The protein was homogeneous, as assessed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Amino acid analysis indicated the presence of about 9 half-cystine residues per mole. The neutral isoelectric point of the inhibitor suggested that some of the apparently acidic residues (glutamic and aspartic) existed in the amide form. The first twenty N-terminal amino acids were sequenced. Some homology appeared to exist between the α-amylase II inhibitor and trypsin inhibitor from barley. Complex formation between α-amylase II and the inhibitor was detected by the appearance of a new molecular weight species after gel filtration on Bio-Gel P 100. Enzyme and inhibitor had to be preincubated for 5 min, prior to assaying for enzyme activity before maximum inhibition was attained. Inhibition increased at higher pH values. At pH 5.5, an approximately 1100 molar excess of inhibitor over α-amylase II produced 40% inhibition, whereas, at pH 8.0, a 1:1 molar ratio of inhibitor to enzyme produced the same degree of inhibition.  相似文献   

18.
Polyclonal antibodies raised against barley (1→3,1→4)-β-d-glucanase, α-amylase and carboxypeptidase were used to detect precursor polypeptides of these hydrolytic enzymes among the in vitro translation products of mRNA isolated from the scutellum and aleurone of germinating barley. In the scutellum, mRNA encoding carboxypeptidase appeared to be relatively more abundant than that encoding α-amylase or (1→3,1→4)-β-d-glucanase, while in the aleurone α-amylase and (1→3,1→4)-β-d-glucanase mRNAs predominated. The apparent molecular weights of the precursors for (1→3,1→4)-β-d-glucanase, α-amylase, and carboxypeptidase were 33,000, 44,000, and 35,000, respectively. In each case these are slightly higher (1,500-5,000) than molecular weights of the mature enzymes. Molecular weights of precursors immunoprecipitated from aleurone and scutellum mRNA translation products were identical for each enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Response of barley aleurone layers to abscisic Acid   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Ho DT 《Plant physiology》1976,58(2):175-178
Cordycepin, an inhibitor of RNA synthesis in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) aleurone cells, does not inhibit the gibberellic acid-enhanced α-amylase (EC 3.2.1.1.) synthesis in barley aleurone layers if it is added 12 hours or more after the addition of the hormone. However, the accumulation of α-amylase activity after 12 hours of gibberellic acid can be decreased by abscisic acid. The accumulation of α-amylase activity is sustained or quickly restored when cordycepin is added simultaneously or some time after abscisic acid, indicating that the response of aleurone layers to abscisic acid depends on the continuous synthesis of a short lived RNA. By analysis of the newly synthesized proteins by gel electrophoresis with sodium dodecylsulfate, we observed that the synthesis of α-amylase is decreased in the presence of abscisic acid while the synthesis of most of the other proteins remains unchanged. From the rate of resumption of α-amylase production in the presence of cordycepin and abscisic acid, it appears that abscisic acid does not have a measurable effect on the stability of α-amylase mRNA.  相似文献   

20.
Yorkstar wheat, grown in New York State, has a high percentage (10-11) of grains without embryos. The embryoless grains have viable aleurone layers and show no sign of injury. These grains are able to support α-amylase synthesis only in the presence of gibberellin A3 (GA3). In the absence of GA3 some protein synthesis occurs in embryoless grains during the early hours of soaking, indicating that such activity occurs prior to and independent of GA3 induction of α-amylase. The level of β-amylase on a dry weight basis is the same in embryoless and normal grains and decreases with time of soaking. In the presence of GA3, β-amylase decreases at a slower rate. Isoenzymes of α-amylase from GA3-treated embryoless and normal grains show quantitative as well as qualitative differences. Cycloheximide (60 μg/ml) completely inhibits the synthesis of α-amylase by embryoless grains. Of the RNA synthesis inhibitors, actinomycin D (60 μg/ml) was ineffective while 6-methylpurine (60 μg/ml) gave 65% inhibition without decreasing the number of isoenzymes.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号