Abstract

Oil-bodies, from the immature cotyledons of sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.), were difficult to purify to homogeneity using conventional techniques. The major protein contaminants were albumin and globulin storage proteins. A protocol has been developed, therefore, based upon the stringent washing of the oil-body fraction in 9 M urea, which effectively removed almost all the contaminating protein as judged by SDS/PAGE. The urea-washed oil-bodies were enriched in two major proteins of M(r) 19000 and 20000. These proteins were oleosins as demonstrated by their amino acid compositions and the sequence analysis of peptides produced by CNBr cleavage. Far-UV CD spectra of the oleosins in trifluoroethanol, trifluoroethanol/water mixtures and as mixed micelles in SDS, were typical of alpha-helical proteins with alpha-helical contents of some 55%. The phospholipid content of the urea-washed preparations was less than 0.1% of that required to form a half-unit membrane surrounding the oil-body. The oil-body surface therefore appears to be an unusual and novel structure, covered largely by an oleosin protein coat or pellicle rather than a conventional fluid membrane, half-unit or otherwise.

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