Abstract
Although the aleurone layer of ceral grain seeds has many advantages for the study of gibberellin action, it has the disadvantage that the hand-isolation of the aleurone layers is time-consuming. To overcome this disadvantage, a commercially available pasta machine was modified and used to remove aleurone layers from imbibed barley (Hordeum vulgare) seeds. This equipment allows isolation of a thousand layers in 5 minutes compared to the 3 to 4 hours required to hand-isolate them. The machine-made aleurone layers are gibberellic-acid responsive and the response is similar both qualitatively and quantitatively to that of hand-isolated layers. IMAGES:
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CITATION STYLE
Murthy, P. P. N. (1989). A Fast and Easy Technique for the Isolation of Aleurone Layers. Plant Physiology, 90(2), 388–389. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.90.2.388
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