Date seeds were sampled at regular intervals from pollination (March) to mature fruit (September) and processed for light microscopy and SDS‐PAGE. Seed fresh weight rose until early June and then declined slightly through September due to a continuous decrease in water content. Cell wall formation started in May in the free nuclear endosperm and proceeded centripetally from the inner integument to the seed center. Wall thickening in each cell started in cell corners and showed a layered appearance with calcofluor white staining. It started in early June in the center of the seed and proceeded centrifugally such that the outer cells showed cell wall thickening in late June. Thickened cell walls were soft and PAS positive at inception, but staining disappeared and hardness increased during wall maturation. Cell elongation in the radial direction accompanied wall thickening. Protein body formation started after cell wall thickening and followed the same centrifugal developmental pattern. Mature protein bodies occurred in even the outermost cells by early July. No further structural changes occurred after this time. The high molecular weight storage proteins appeared in late June, which is when protein bodies had formed in all but the outer endosperm cells; however, these proteins did not appear simultaneously and minor changes in protein bands continued until maturation. α‐Galactosidase activity was present in the developing endosperm and peaked at 13 wk after pollination. The data suggest that the thickened wall is deposited as a highly substituted galactomannan, but that most of the galactose side branches are clipped off presumably by α‐galactosidase during cell wall polymerization.
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