Abstract
During barley germination, the aleurone layer secretes most of the enzymes required to degrade the endosperm, many of which are yet to be characterized. We used activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) to detect a range of active enzymes extracted from aleurone layers isolated from grains of a commercial malting barley variety incubated with or without gibberellic acid (GA). Enzymes found to be induced by GA were putative aleurains, cathepsin-B-like proteases and serine hydrolases. By using an inhibitory sugar panel, a specific active retaining β-glycosidase in the barley aleurone was identified as a putative xylanase. Our results show that ABPP can be used rapidly to identify a variety of active enzyme isoforms in cereal aleurone without the need for enzyme purification.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Daneri-Castro, S. N., Chandrasekar, B., Grosse-Holz, F. M., van der Hoorn, R. A. L., & Roberts, T. H. (2016). Activity-based protein profiling of hydrolytic enzymes induced by gibberellic acid in isolated aleurone layers of malting barley. FEBS Letters, 2956–2962. https://doi.org/10.1002/1873-3468.12320
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.