Amino acids, soluble proteins, and isoenzyme patterns of peroxidase during the germination of jack pine
- 1 December 1971
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Botany
- Vol. 49 (12) , 2151-2161
- https://doi.org/10.1139/b71-303
Abstract
In germinating jack pine, changes in nitrogenous compounds were separated into two phases, the first, where through imbibition, seeds expanded but the prospective seedling remained enclosed by the haploid and nutritive female gametophyte (0 to 3 days), and second, when radicles emerged and only cotyledons remained in contact with the gametophyte (4 to 11 days).During imbibition, total soluble N in seeds dropped and the amino acid pool was dominated by high levels of free arginine. As levels of arginine N declined the greatest changes in percentage composition involved glutamic acid (gametophyte) and glutamine (embryo). Thereafter, arginine N accumulated. By 7 days, arginine N was recovered in seedlings primarily from cotyledons. High asparagine levels were observed in stems and roots as glutamine N in the emerging seedling declined.Protein reserves in the seedling were nearly depleted by 4 days. Total protein and, at later stages, the ratio of hexone bases to dicarboxylic acids was generally higher in the gametophyte than in the seedling. Soluble proteins of the embryo were separated into at least 18 bands by disc electrophoresis and contained peroxidase activity which increased strongly after the first week of germination. The increase of nine isoenzymes of peroxidase with mobilities towards the anode correlated with the histochemical localization of peroxidase at the emerging shoot and root tips and throughout the vascular tissues.Keywords
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