Changes in protein synthesis during stratification and dormancy release in embryos of sugar maple (Acer saccharum) |
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Authors: | Beth A. Hance John M. Bevington |
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Affiliation: | Dept of Biology, Moravian College, Bethlehem, PA J8018-6650, USA. |
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Abstract: | Protein synthesis in dormant embryos of sugar maple ( Acer saccharum ) was investigated in seeds stratified at 4°C or incubated at 15°C. Seeds stratified at 4°C germinated after 27 days; seeds incubated at 15°C failed to germinate. Stratification increased the embryo's capacity for protein synthesis by day 11 as measured by in vivo incorporation of [35S]-methionine into purified protein. At 4°C protein synthesis in the embryonic axis rose in a linear fashion prior to germination, whereas in cotyledons it increased until day 20 and then declined. Analysis of radiolabelled proteins by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis revealed that the levels of specific proteins were altered by temperature, primarily in the cotyledons. Several proteins were expressed in the cotyledons at 15°C but were absent in unstratified embryos and in embryos stratified at 4°C. That is, the expression of these proteins was repressed during stratification and release from dormancy. Levels of other proteins in the cotyledons declined at 4°C during stratification. We suggest that one or more of these proteins may be associated with the inhibition of growth of the embryonic axis imposed by the cotyledons. |
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Keywords: | Acer saccharum cotyledons dormancy embryo germination protein synthesis seed stratification sugar maple |
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