Abstract

The variations of the amounts of phospholipid transfer proteins (PLTP), determined by ELISA and immunoblotting methods, were followed during the maturation and germination of maize (Zea mays L.) seeds. Changes of the amounts of PLTP occur during seed maturation. The levels of PLTP, low in the first 3 weeks after fecondation, strongly raised 3 to 5 weeks after, then reached and maintained a high value (10% of total soluble proteins) during the last steps of maturation. These variations, determined by ELISA, are in accordance with the observations made by immunoblotting. Changes in phospholipid transfer activity were also found when protein extracts prepared from seeds at different stages of maturation were assayed for transfer activity. The levels of PLTP were also determined during the germination of maize seeds and the early growth of the plantlets, both in the endosperm and the aerial parts. While no major change was observed in the endosperm, a high increase in PLTP level was found in the aerial part of the plantlet, both by ELISA and immunoblotting. An enhancement of the phospholipid transfer activity was parallely observed in the protein extracts of plantlets at various stages of germination. These results are consistent with an in vivo correlation between the synthesis of phospholipid transfer protein, observed during the maturation and germination of maize seeds, and the biogenesis of membranes which involves intracellular movements of phospholipids.

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