Abstract

The acid lipase of castor endosperm lipid bodies has been studied using colorimetric assay based on the measure of the hydrolytic activity of p-nitrophenyl ester of palmitate and other acyl derivatives. These substrates are compatible with the natural triacylglycerols for the measure of lipolytic activities. The subcellularly-surveyed acid lipolytic activity in the germinated castor bean endospermal tissue was found to be enhanced in the lipid bodies. The lipase, which is partially latent and tightly associated with lipid bodies, is an exceptionally stable enzyme with an optimum activity at pH 4.5 and displays an inverse relationship between its activity and the acyl chain length of its substrate. To facilitate isolation of the acid lipase, a procedure has been developed to solubilise the membrane-bound enzyme in an active form. The detergent-solubilised acid lipase after two chromatographic steps yielded an eight-fold active preparation which after gel permeation resolved as heterogeneous aggregate in excess of 500 kD. Lipase-enriched preparations showed consistent presence of 14 and 60 kD proteins which constituted the most abundant species of the lipid bodies. Although it has not been possible to obtain an active lipase preparation in a state free of either the 14 or 60 kD protein, the lipase activity in the detergent extracts of lipid bodies was immunoprecipitable with antibodies raised against the 60 kD component.

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