Protein bodies were prepared from the cotyledons of pumpkin (Cucurbita sp.) seeds by employing a nonaqueous isolation method. Both light micrographic examination and the marker enzyme assays have shown that the isolated protein bodies were intact and contamination with other cell organelles or cytoplasmic components was negligible. A proteolytic enzyme catalyzing the limited hydrolysis of carboxymethylated gamma' chain of globulin was found to be present in the protein bodies. The specific activity in the protein body (18 units per milligram protein) was higher than that in the whole cell extract (13 units per milligram protein), indicating that the limited proteolytic enzyme was localized in the protein body.After lysis of the protein bodies using hypotonic buffer solution, the suborganellar components (matrix, membranes, and crystalloids) were separated by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The crystalloid was composed of only globulin, a major seed protein. The major proteins of matrix and membrane fractions were shown to have mol wt of approximately 10,000. About 90% of the limited proteolytic activity was found in the matrix region.
CITATION STYLE
Hara-Nishimura, I., Nishimura, M., Matsubara, H., & Akazawa, T. (1982). Suborganellar Localization of Proteinase Catalyzing the Limited Hydrolysis of Pumpkin Globulin. Plant Physiology, 70(3), 699–703. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.70.3.699
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