Abstract

When fresh extracts of endosperms separated from germinating seeds of Scots pine were dialysed at 5°C, proteinase activity on haemoglobin at pH 3.7 showed only a small initial increase, proteinase activities on casein at pH 5.4 and at pH 7.0 increased several‐fold, and all the corresponding inhibitor activities disappeared (Salmia and Mikola 1980, Physiol. Plant. 48: 126–130). To find out what happens during dialysis, both fresh and dialysed extracts were fractionated by gel chromatography on Sephacryl S‐200. – The fresh extracts had a major proteinase peak (mol. wt. 42,000) with high activity at pH 3.7 and moderate activities at pH 5.4 and 7.0 (pine proteinase I) and a smaller peak (mol. wt. 30,000) with high activity at pH 5.4 and 7.0 and smaller activity at pH 3.7 (pine proteinase II). In dialysed extracts the situation was reversed: the peak of proteinase I was very small while the peak of proteinase II was very high. Apparently, proteinase I is largely inactivated during dialysis while the activity of proteinase II increases, at least partly due to destruction of inhibitors. – The two enzymes were ‐SH proteinases, as they were completely inhibited by p‐hydroxymercuribenzoate; both of them were also inhibited by the endogenous proteinase inhibitors of resting pine seeds. Besides these enzymes, the endosperm extracts contained pepsin‐like acid proteinase activity, which is not affected by the endogenous inhibitors. This enzyme activity was largely inactivated during dialysis.

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