Abstract

AbstractResting seeds of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) contain inhibitors which inhibit the proteinase activity present in germinating seeds but have no effect on trypsin or chymotrypsin. When a crude inhibitor preparation was chromatographed on Sephadex G‐75, the inhibitor activity separated into four peaks with elution volumes corresponding to the molecular weights 24,000, 14,600, 14,000, and 9000. Each of the inhibitors affected both the hydrolysis of haemoglobin at pH 3.7 and the hydrolysis of casein at pH 5.4 and 7.0 by proteinase extracts prepared from “germinating” endosperms. These results suggest that one major proteinase was possibly acting in all the assays.In resting seeds inhibitor activity was present in both the embryo and the endosperm, the activity (per mg dry weight) in the embryo being about 2‐fold that in the endosperm. In the endosperms of germinating seeds the inhibitor activity per seed decreased at about the same rate as total N and dry weight. In the seedlings the activity per seedling remained approximately constant. The patterns of the activity changes suggest that the inhibitors do not control the breakdown of storage proteins; a more probable function is the protection of other cellular components from the high proteinase activities required for the rapid proteolysis during germination.

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