Abstract

Protein distribution in endosperm of maize grains differing by their texture, flint or dent, and by their genotype, wild or waxy or amylose-extender, was examined by the successive use of 0.5 M NaCl, 0.5 M NaCl plus 0.6% 2-mercaptoethanol (2ME) at neutral and then alkaline pH, and 55% 2-propanol plus 0.6% 2ME as extractants. Proteins extracted in the presence of 2ME were characterized by their size polymorphism and amino acid composition. Proteins isolated with NaCl plus 2ME at neutral pH corresponded with a mixture of gamma-zein (27 kDa) and glutelin-like proteins. Proteins isolated with NaCl plus 2ME at pH 10 were a mixture of gamma-zeins (27 and 16 kDa) and beta-zeins (14 kDa). Alcohol-soluble proteins consisted of alpha-, beta-, and delta-zeins, alpha subunits being predominant. Zein quantitation was improved by weighing the nitrogen percentage of extracts by their zein content, as estimated from the data on amino acid composition. The data reported by Wolf et al. (Cereal Chem. 1975, 52, 765) were integrated to the results of this work to suggest the occurrence of an inverse correlation between amylose in starch and zeins in proteins.

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