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1.
Chromatography of maize kernel extracts on DEAE-cellulose resolves two fractions of starch synthase activity, one of which (starch synthase 1) is capable of synthesizing α-glucan in the absence of exogenous primer and the presence of 0.5 m citrate (J. L. Ozbun, J. S. Hawker, and J. Preiss, Plant Physiol. (1971) 48, 765–769). This starch synthase has been purified 200-fold from developing kernels of normal maize, and shown to have no detectable activities of branching enzyme, amylase, pullulanase, phosphorylase, and D enzyme. The preparation, however, was not electrophoretically homogeneous. This preparation had a Km value of 0.033 mm for ADPglucose in the presence of 0.5 m citrate. The reaction in the presence of citrate was stimulated 10-fold by the addition of excess purified branching enzyme. This stimulation is higher than those reported previously (C. D. Boyer and J. Preiss, Plant Physiol. (1979) 64, 1039–1042) but is consistent with the predicted effects of removal of amylase activity. The effects of salts other than citrate on activity in the absence of exogenous primer were small, but the stimulation could be restored by the addition of excess purified branching enzyme. Citrate increased the affinity of the enzyme for the endogenous primer present to such a level that no effect of exogenous primer on reaction rate could be observed in the presence of 0.5 m citrate. Analysis of the glucan/iodine complex and the enzymatic breakdown products patterns from the products of the starch synthase reaction indicates a high degree of linearity. The results obtained are discussed in relation to the biosynthesis of starch in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
Boyer CD  Preiss J 《Plant physiology》1981,67(6):1141-1145
Soluble starch synthase and starch-branching enzymes in extracts from kernels of four maize genotypes were compared. Extracts from normal (nonmutant) maize were found to contain two starch synthases and three branching enzyme fractions. The different fractions could be distinguished by chromatographic properties and kinetic properties under various assay conditions. Kernels homozygous for the recessive amylose-extender (ae) allele were missing branching enzyme IIb. In addition, the citrate-stimulated activity of starch synthase I was reduced. This activity could be regenerated by the addition of branching enzyme to this fraction. No other starch synthase fractions were different from normal enzymes. Extracts from kernels homozygous for the recessive dull (du) allele were found to contain lower branching enzyme IIa and starch synthase II activities. Other fractions were not different from the normal enzymes. Analysis of extracts from kernels of the double mutant ae du indicated that the two mutants act independently. Branching enzyme IIb was absent and the citrate-stimulated reaction of starch synthase I was reduced but could be regenerated by the addition of branching enzyme (ae properties) and both branching enzyme IIa and starch synthase II were greatly reduced (du properties). Starch from ae and du endosperms contains higher amylose (66 and 42%, respectively) than normal endosperm (26%). In addition, the amylopectin fraction of ae starch is less highly branched than amylopectin from normal or du starch. The above observations suggest that the alterations of the starch may be accounted for by changes in the soluble synthase and branching enzyme fractions.  相似文献   

3.
ADPglucose: α-1,4-glucan α-4-glucosyltransferases (starch synthetases) from leaves of Vitis vinifera and leaves and kernels of Zea mays were chromatographed on DEAE-cellulose columns. One form of the enzyme was present in grape leaves having activity both in the presence and absence of primer. Two forms were present in both leaves and kernels of maize. The second peak of activity in maize leaves and the first peak in maize kernels synthesized a polyglucan in the absence of primer. A peak of branching enzyme (Q-enzyme) occurred between the two starch synthetase peaks with both tissues. When fractions containing starch synthetase and branching enzyme were added to the first leaf starch synthetase peak, up to 100-fold activation of the unprimed reaction occurred. Branching enzyme did not stimulate the unprimed activity of the first kernel peak and no branching enzyme could be detected in this peak. The unprimed product was a branched polyglucan with mainly α-1,4-links.  相似文献   

4.
Concentrations of ADPglucose:α-1,4-glucan-4-glucosyltransferase (starch synthase) and α-1,4 glucan: α-1,4-glucan-6-glycosyltransferase (branching enzyme) from developing seeds of Pisum sativum were measured. Primed starch synthase activity increased from 8 to 14 days after anthesis and decreased by 50 % at 26 days. Citrate-stimulated starch synthase activity was highest at 10 days after anthesis decreasing to low levels by 22 days. Branching enzyme activity increased from 8 to 18 days after anthesis and decreased little by 26 days. Two fractions of starch synthase were recovered by gradient elution from DEAE-cellulose of extracts from 12- and 18-day-old seeds. The two fractions differed in primer specificity, Km for ADPG and relative amounts of citrate-stimulated activity. A major and minor fraction of branching enzyme were observed in extracts from both 12- and 18-day-old seeds. Marked differences in the relative abilities ofthe two branching enzyme fractions to stimulate phosphorylase and to branch amylose as well as pH optima were found. Although the content of the starch synthase and branching enzyme fractions varied with seed age, little difference was seen in the properties of chromatographically similar fractions. Therefore, the changes in starch synthase and branching enzyme activity during pea seed development resulted from changes in the concentrations of a few enzyme forms, but not the appearance of different enzyme forms.  相似文献   

5.
Previous reports have demonstrated the incorporation of glucose from ADP-glucose into methanol-insoluble and TCA-insoluble fractions in cell extracts of Escherichia coli in the absence of added primer α-glucan. This activity is reduced 6- to 76-fold in cell extracts of three independently isolated glycogen synthase-deficient mutants of E. coli B. Homogeneous preparations of E. coli B glycogen synthase catalyze incorporation of glucose into both methanol- and TCA-insoluble fractions in the absence of added primer. Since glycogen synthase catalyzes these reactions, it is not necessary to propose a protein acceptor glucose or a unique ADP-glucose-glycosyl transferase to catalyze formation of the glucoprotein in E. coli cell extracts to explain glucose incorporation into TCA-insoluble material (R. Barengo et al. (1975) FEBS Lett.53, 274–278). The incorporation of glucose into methanol-and TCA-insoluble fractions is stimulated by 0.25 m citrate and by branching enzyme. Citrate reduces the Km for the primer, glycogen, about 11- to 15-fold. Branching enzyme can also reduce the concentration of primer required for incorporation of glucose into methanol-insoluble material. The simultaneous presence of both 0.25 m citrate and branching enzyme enables the glycogen synthase reaction rate to proceed at 30% the maximal velocity at a primer concentration of 1 μg/ml. Incorporation of glucose into methanol- or TCA-insoluble material in the absence of primer is completely inhibited by adding α-amylase. Furthermore, incorporation into methanol- or TCA-insoluble material is reduced 13- to 16-fold relative to the reaction occurring in the presence of primer when glycogen synthase is pretreated with glucoamylase and α-amylase. Previous results show that homogeneous preparations of glycogen synthase contain glucan. Heat-denatured glucogen synthase can act as a primer for the glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen synthase reactions. Both the TCA- and methanol-insoluble products form I2-glucan complexes with wavelength maxima of about 580–590 nm and 610–615 nm, respectively, suggesting that they are mainly linear chain glucans. The products are completely solubilized with α-amylase. The TCA-insoluble product is not solubilized by pronase treatment. The above results strongly suggest that previous reports on formation of glucoprotein primer for glycogen synthesis or on de novo glycogen synthesis in various similar systems is due to endogenous glucan associated with glycogen synthase rather than formation of glucoprotein which then acts as primer for glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
Mutants of Escherichia coli which are unable to synthesize glycogen were used to study the so-called “unprimed” synthesis of glycogen. The glycogen synthase has been partially purified from these mutants. During the purification, attempts were made to separate the activity which requires the addition of an exogenous primer (primed activity) from the activity which does not require a primer but is highly dependent on the presence of some salts such as citrate and EDTA (unprimed activity). No separation between these two activities could be achieved but the results obtained by chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex indicate that there is a single form of glycogen synthase which is responsible for both unprimed and primed activity. The evidence that a single protein was necessary to catalyze these two reactions was given by the findings that mutants defective in glycogen synthase activity were unable to catalyze glucosyl transfer without added primer. At low concentration, the glycogen synthase purified from a branching enzyme negative mutant catalyzed the unprimed reaction at a slow rate even in presence of salts. A protein activator of this reaction was found in mutants lacking glycogen synthase but not in mutants lacking branching enzyme. The hypothesis that this activator is the branching enzyme itself was supported by the observation that it co-purified with the branching enzyme from a E. coli strain defective in glycogen synthase activity. EDTA or Triton X-100 increased the stimulation of the unprimed synthesis by the branching enzyme. The apparent affinity of the glycogen synthase for glycogen was increased twofold in the presence of EDTA but the branching enzyme further increased the effect of EDTA. The combined action of the glycogen synthase and the branching enzyme on the endogenous glucan associated with the synthase may account for the unprimed activity observed in vitro.  相似文献   

7.
Soluble starch synthases and branching enzymes have been partially purified from developing sorghum seeds. Two major fractions and one minor fraction of starch synthase were eluted on DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The minor enzyme eluted first and was similar to the early eluting major synthase in citrate-stimulated activity, faster reaction rates with glycogen primers than amylopectin primers, and in Km for ADP-glucose (0.05 and 0.08 mM, respectively). The starch synthase peak eluted last had no citrate-stimulated activity, was equally active with glycogen and amylopectin primers, and had the highest Km for ADP-glucose (0.10 mM). Four fractions of branching enzymes were recovered from DEAE-cellulose chromatography. One fraction eluted in the buffer wash; the other three co-eluted with the three starch synthases. All four fractions could branch amylose or amylopectin, and stimulated α-glucan synthesis catalysed by phosphorylase. Electrophoretic separation and activity staining for starch synthase of crude extracts and DEAE-cellulose fractions demonstrated complex banding patterns. The colour of the bands after iodine staining indicated that branching enzyme and starch synthase co-migrated during electrophoresis.  相似文献   

8.
Osmotically permeabilized potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) tuber slices were used to study the biosynthesis of starch under semi in vivo conditions. Criteria to distinguish the various enzymes involved in starch biosynthesis were developed based on the characteristics of the enzymes in in vitro experiments. Branching enzyme activity was inhibited at pH 8.5 or higher, while the starch synthases functioned optimally between pH 8.8 and 9.1. Unprimed soluble starch synthase activity was only apparent in the presence of sodium citrate (0.4 molar or higher). Granulebound and primed soluble starch synthase were active in the absence of sodium citrate. Primed soluble starch synthase activity was susceptible to inhibition by 10 millimolar zinc sulfate, while granule-bound starch synthase activity was not. The incorporation of the Glc moiety of ADP-Glc into starch in tissue slices by the various starch synthases was consistent with in vitro data with respect to the affinity of the enzymes for substrate, the pH profile, the stimulation by citrate, and the inhibition by zinc sulfate. These data were used to determine the activity of each of the starch synthases in tissue slices: granule-bound and soluble starch synthase transferred 37 and 55 picomoles ADP-Glc per hour per milligram fresh weight into starch of permeabilized tissue slices at 30°C and pH 9.1. In the presence of 0.5 molar sodium citrate, at least 40 picomoles ADP-Glc per hour per milligram fresh weight as transferred into starch by unprimed soluble starch synthase activity.  相似文献   

9.
Electron photomicrographs of endosperm tissue from germinating seed of Ricinus communis L. cv. Hale show proplastids which contain prominent starch grains. The content of starch in endosperm tissue increased from 500 micrograms per seed, in imbibed seed, to 1,100 micrograms per seed in 5-day-old seedlings. The maximum net rate of starch deposition was 1.1 nanomoles glucose incorporated per minute per seed. About 200 micrograms of starch remained in the endosperm 9 days after imbibition. Starch content followed the same developmental pattern as the content of sucrose, free reducing sugars, and other metabolic processes found in this tissue. Two key enzymes of starch synthesis, adenosine diphosphoglucose (ADPG) pyrophosphorylase and ADPG-starch glucosyl transferase (starch synthetase) exhibited maximum activities at 4 and 5 days after germination, respectively. The maximum activity of ADPG pyrophosphorylase was 8.17 nanomoles ADPG formed per minute per seed, whereas starch synthetase exhibited an activity of 125 nanomoles glucose incorporated per minute per seed. These levels of enzyme activity are sufficient to account for the starch synthesis observed. Other enzymes which may be involved in starch synthesis include 3-phosphoglycerate kinase which showed an activity of 8.76 units per seed, triose-P isomerase (2.56 units per seed), fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase (0.99 units per seed), fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (0.23 units per seed), phosphoglucose isomerase (12.6 units per seed), and phosphoglucomutase (9.72 units per seed). The activities of these enzymes were similar to previously reported values.

Starch synthetase was found in association with the fraction containing proplastids isolated from endosperm tissue. Of the total starch synthetase activity in the endosperm, 38% was particulate. Forty-four% of the total particulate activity of starch synthetase placed on sucrose gradients was associated with the band containing proplastids. The proplastids contained 98% of the ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase carboxylase activity placed on the gradient.

  相似文献   

10.
A novel shrunken endosperm mutant of barley   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Although mutations affecting several enzymes of the starch synthetic pathway in developing cereal endosperm have been isolated, none has a major effect on soluble starch synthase We report a new recessive shrunken endosperm mutant in barley ( Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Bomi-like), shx , which has 25% of normal starch content. We have assayed the activity of sucrose synthase (EC 2.4.1.13), ADP and UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylases (EC 2.7.7.27 and 2.7.7.9), branching enzyme (EC.2.4.1.18), and granule-bound and soluble starch synthase (EC 2.4.1.21) in shx. Sucrose synthase activity is reduced by 49% and UDP-glucose pyrrphosphorylase is 80% of the normal level. Branching enzyme and starch-bound starch synthase activities are normal, but ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase activity is reduced by 72%. The soluble starch synthase that is primer-independent in the presence of sodium citrate shows 14% of normal activity in shx. whereas the primer-dependent form is unaffected. This lower starch synthase activity in shx cannot be explained by inhibition, substrate destruction or lack of primer. Although several starch-synthetic enzymes are affected, it is suggested that the primer independent from of soluble starch synthase may be the primary-site of the mutation in shx.  相似文献   

11.
Waxy wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) lacks the waxy protein, which is also known as granule-bound starch synthase I (GBSSI). The starch granules of waxy wheat endosperm and pollen do not contain amylose and therefore stain red-brown with iodine. However, we observed that starch from pericarp tissue of waxy wheat stained blue-black and contained amylose. Significantly higher starch synthase activity was detected in pericarp starch granules than in endosperm starch granules. A granule-bound protein that differed from GBSSI in molecular mass and isoelectric point was detected in the pericarp starch granules but not in granules from endosperm. This protein was designated GBSSII. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of GBSSII, although not identical to wheat GBSSI, showed strong homology to waxy proteins or GBSSIs of cereals and potato, and contained the motif KTGGL, which is the putative substrate-binding site of GBSSI of plants and of glycogen synthase of Escherichia coli. GBSSII cross-reacted specifically with antisera raised against potato and maize GBSSI. This study indicates that GBSSI and GBSSII are expressed in a tissue-specific manner in different organs, with GBSSII having an important function in amylose synthesis in the pericarp.  相似文献   

12.
Amyloplast is the site of starch synthesis in the storage tissue of maize (Zea mays). The amyloplast stroma contains an enriched group of proteins when compared with the whole endosperm. Proteins with molecular masses of 76 and 85 kD have been identified as starch synthase I and starch branching enzyme IIb, respectively. A 112-kD protein was isolated from the stromal fraction by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and subjected to tryptic digestion and amino acid sequence analysis. Three peptide sequences showed high identity to plastidic forms of starch phosphorylase (SP) from sweet potato, potato, and spinach. SP activity was identified in the amyloplast stromal fraction and was enriched 4-fold when compared with the activity in the whole endosperm fraction. Native and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analyses showed that SP activity was associated with the amyloplast stromal 112-kD protein. In addition, antibodies raised against the potato plastidic SP recognized the amyloplast stromal 112-kD protein. The amyloplast stromal 112-kD SP was expressed in whole endosperm isolated from maize harvested 9 to 24 d after pollination. Results of affinity electrophoresis and enzyme kinetic analyses showed that the amyloplast stromal 112-kD SP preferred amylopectin over glycogen as a substrate in the synthetic reaction. The maize shrunken-4 mutant had reduced SP activity due to a decrease of the amyloplast stromal 112-kD enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
对水稻胚乳淀粉颗粒结合的淀粉分支酶进行了研究.酶活性分析表明水稻胚乳中存在着与淀粉颗粒结合的淀粉分支酶.氨基酸测序分析结果表明结合于水稻胚乳淀粉粒的淀粉分支酶是分子量为84 kD的淀粉分支酶3(rice starch branching enzyme 3; RBE3).从开花后5 d到种子成熟,淀粉颗粒结合的RBE3蛋白都保持较为稳定的含量.Northern 分析表明水稻胚乳发育过程中RBE4最先表达而RBE3和RBE1的表达滞后.综合以上研究结果说明RBE3存在于水稻胚乳的淀粉之中是由于RBE3与淀粉葡聚糖链具有较高亲和性而难以和葡聚糖链解离,进而随着淀粉粒的增长而被其包裹.  相似文献   

14.
Apical kernels of maize (Zea mays L.) ears have smaller size and lower growth rates than basal kernels. To improve our understanding of this difference, the developmental patterns of starch-synthesis-pathway enzyme activities and accumulation of sugars and starch was determined in apical- and basal-kernel endosperm of greenhouse-grown maize (cultivar Cornell 175) plants. Plants were synchronously pollinated, kernels were sampled from apical and basal ear positions throughout kernel development, and enzyme activities were measured in crude preparations. Several factors were correlated with the higher dry matter accumulation rate and larger mature kernel size of basal-kernel endosperm. During the period of cell expansion (7 to 19 days after pollination), the activity of insoluble (acid) invertase and sucose concentration in endosperm of basal kernels exceeded that in apical kernels. Soluble (alkaline) invertase was also high during this stage but was the same in endosperm of basal and apical kernels, while glucose concentration was higher in apical-kernel endosperm. During the period of maximal starch synthesis, the activities of sucrose synthase, ADP-Glc-pyrophosphorylase, and insoluble (granule-bound) ADP-Glc-starch synthase were higher in endosperm of basal than apical kernels. Soluble ADP-Glc-starch synthase, which was maximal during the early stage before starch accumulated, was the same in endosperm from apical and basal kernels. It appeared that differences in metabolic potential between apical and basal kernels were established at an early stage in kernel development.  相似文献   

15.
Studies of maize starch branching enzyme mutants suggest that the amylose extender high amylose starch phenotype is a consequence of the lack of expression of the predominant starch branching enzyme II isoform expressed in the endosperm, SBEIIb. However, in wheat, the ratio of SBEIIb and SBEIIa expression are inversely related to the expression levels observed in maize and rice. Analysis of RNA at 15 days post anthesis suggests that there are about 4-fold more RNA for SBE IIa than for SBE IIb. The genes for SBE IIa and SBE IIb from wheat are distinguished in the size of the first three exons, allowing isoform-specific antibodies to be produced. These antibodies were used to demonstrate that in the soluble fraction, the amount of SBE IIa protein is two to three fold higher than SBIIb, whereas in the starch granule, there is two to three fold more SBE IIb protein amount than SBE IIa. In a further difference to maize and rice, the genes for SBE IIa and SBE IIb are both located on the long arm of chromosome 2 in wheat, in a position not expected from rice–maize–wheat synteny.  相似文献   

16.
Starch granule preparations from the endosperm tissue of all waxy maize (Zea mays L.) mutants tested have low and approximately equal capability to incorporate glucose from adenosine diphosphate glucose into starch. As the substrate concentration is reduced, however, the activity of waxy preparations relative to nonmutant increases until, at the lowest substrate concentration utilized (0.1 μM), the activity of the waxy preparations is nearly equal to that of the nonmutant preparation. The apparent Km (adenosine diphosphate glucose) for starch granule preparations from wx-C/wx-C/wx-C endosperms was 7.1 × 10−5 M, which is compared to 3 × 10−3 M for preparations from nonwaxy endosperms. Starch granule preparations from three other waxy mutants of independent mutational origin have levels of enzymic activity approximately equal to wx-C at a given substrate concentration giving rise to similar apparent Km estimates. We conclude that there is in maize endosperm starch granules a second starch granule-bound glycosyl transferase, whose presence is revealed when mutation eliminates activity of the more active glucosyl transferase catalyzing the same reaction.  相似文献   

17.
Starch biosynthesis in cereal endosperm   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Stored starch generally consists of two d-glucose homopolymers, the linear polymer amylose and a highly branched glucan amylopectin that connects linear chains. Amylopectin structurally contributes to the crystalline organization of the starch granule in cereals. In the endosperm, amylopectin biosynthesis requires the proper execution of a coordinated series of enzymatic reactions involving ADP glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase), soluble starch synthase (SS), starch branching enzyme (BE), and starch debranching enzyme (DBE), whereas amylose is synthesized by AGPase and granule-bound starch synthase (GBSS). It is highly possible that plastidial starch phosphorylase (Pho1) plays an important role in the formation of primers for starch biosynthesis in the endosperm. Recent advances in our understanding of the functions of individual enzyme isoforms have provided new insights into how linear polymer chains and branch linkages are synthesized in cereals. In particular, genetic analyses of a suite of mutants have formed the basis of a new model outlining the role of various enzyme isoforms in cereal starch production. In our current review, we summarize the recent research findings related to starch biosynthesis in cereal endosperm, with a particular focus on rice.  相似文献   

18.
Soluble starch branching enzymes and starch synthases from maize kernels of differing dosage of the ae locus were purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. A near-linear relationship between increasing dosage of the dominate amylose-extender allele (Ae) and branching enzyme IIb activity was found. In contrast, levels and properties of branching enzymes I and IIa, as well as the citrate-stimulated and primer-requiring starch synthases, remained unchanged. The near-linear increase in branching enzyme IIb activity with increasing doses of the Ae allele is consistent with the hypothesis that ae is the structural gene coding for branching enzyme IIb.Paper of the Journal Series, New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station, Cook College, Rutgers University, New Brunswick. This work was performed as part of NJAES Projects 12442 and 12201 (NE-124), supported by the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station, Regional Research Funds, NSF Grant PCM 78-16127, and funds from Corn Refiners Association, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
Immunological characterization of maize starch branching enzymes   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Highly purified fractions of three starch branching enzymes from developing maize (Zea mays L.) endosperm were used to prepare antisera in rabbits. In double diffusion experiments, no immunoprecipitate was observed when branching enzyme IIa or IIb was tested against branching enzyme I antiserum. No immunoprecipitate was formed when branching enzyme I was tested against branching enzyme IIa or IIb antiserum. Increasing amounts of antisera in the above combinations also failed to inhibit enzyme activity. Branching enzyme IIa antiserum cross-reacted and formed spurs with branching enzyme IIb when compared with branching enzyme IIa antigen. Comparison of branching enzyme IIb antiserum with branching enzyme IIa also resulted in an immunoprecipitate. Increasing levels of branching enzyme IIa antiserum inhibited branching enzyme IIb as did the reciprocal combination. The data indicated that branching enzymes IIa and IIb are immunologically similar while branching enzyme I is distinct. The data supports the classification of starch branching enzymes based on genetic, kinetic, and chromatographic properties.  相似文献   

20.
Soluble starch synthases and branching enzymes were purified from developing seeds of the maize inbreds W64A and Ia5125, annual teosintes cv. Galinat's Northern Teosinte and race “Nobogame” and diploid perennial teosinte. Two fractions of starch synthase were obtained by DEAE-cellulose chromatography in all purifications. Starch synthase I fractions had citrate stimulated activity and were most active in primed reactions containing glucogen. Starch synthase II fractions were more active in primed reactions with amylopectine and showed no citrate stimulated activity. Three fractions of branching enzymes were similar kinetically and chromatographically. In addition, antibodies prepared against maize branching enzymes cross reacted with teosinte enzymes. Precipitation lines double diffusion experiments and similar neutralizations of enzymes. precipitation lines of identity in double diffusion experiments and similar neutralization of enzyme activity wiyh increasing levels of antiserum, support the conclusion that maize and teosinte enzymes are highly homologous.  相似文献   

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