An Invertase Inactivator in Maize Endosperm and Factors Affecting Inactivation

  • Jaynes T
  • Nelson O
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Abstract

A protein present in the developing endosperm of maize (Zea mays L.) causes a loss of invertase activity under certain conditions of incubation. This protein, designated an inactivator, inactivates invertase I of maize even in the presence of other proteins. No inactivation of invertase II of maize or yeast invertase has been observed. The inactivator and invertase I are found only in the endosperm. The quantity of inactivator increases in the normal endosperm during development while invertase I activity decreases. However, the altered levels of invertase I activity in several endosperm mutant lines do not result from different quantities of inactivator. The inactivator can decrease invertase I activity during a preincubation period before addition of sucrose; inactivation is noncompetitive. Invertase I activity decreases curvilinearly with an increase in inactivator concentration. At high buffer concentrations or low inactivator concentrations in the reaction mixture, a latent period is observed when invertase I is not inactivated. Inactivation increases with an increase in temperature and a decrease in pH.

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Jaynes, T. A., & Nelson, O. E. (1971). An Invertase Inactivator in Maize Endosperm and Factors Affecting Inactivation. Plant Physiology, 47(5), 629–634. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.47.5.629

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