The effects of sulfur deficiency on the complement of proteins laid down in developing seeds of soybean (Glycine max L. Meff) have been examined. Sulfur deficiency caused a 40% decrease in the level of glycinins and a contrasting elevation in the level of β-conglycinins. The subunit composition of these proteins was also affected. There was in particular a 3-fold increase in the β-subunit of β-conglycinins in the sulfur-deficient seeds, and this accumulated largely as the B 0 -isomer of β-conglycinins, a protein which while virtually devoid of methionine and cysteine retains the physical properties of a normal 7S storage protein. These data demonstrate that a high degree of selectivity can be exerted by environmental stress over the accumulation of proteins in developing seeds.
CITATION STYLE
Gayler, K. R., & Sykes, G. E. (1985). Effects of nutritional stress on the storage proteins of soybeans. Plant Physiology, 78(3), 582–585. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.78.3.582
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