Appearance of New Lipoxygenases in Soybean Cotyledons after Germination and Evidence for Expression of a Major New Lipoxygenase Gene

Abstract
The appearance and subsequent disappearance of lipoxygenase activity at pH 6.8 in germinated cotyledons of soybean (Glycine max [L.]) was shown using a variant soybean cultivar (Kanto 101) that lacks the two lipoxygenase isozymes, L-2 and L-3, that are present in dry seeds of a normal soybean cultivar (Enrei). Three new lipoxygenases, designated lipoxygenase L-4, L-5, and L-6, were purified using anionic or cationic ion exchange chromatography. The major lipoxygenase in 5-day-old cotyledons of the variant soybean was lipoxygenase L-4. Lipoxygenases L-5 and L-6 preferentially produced 13(S)-hydroperoxy-9(Z), 11(E)-octadecadienoic acid (13S-HPOD) as a reaction product of linoleic acid, whereas lipoxygenase L-4 produced both 13S-HPOD and 9(S)-hydroperoxy-10(E), 12(Z)-octadecadienoic acid. All three isozymes have pH optima of 6.5, no activity at pH 9.0, and preferred linolenic acid to linoleic acid as a substrate. Partial amino acid sequencing of lipoxygenase L-4 showed that this isozyme shares amino acid sequence homology with lipoxygenases L-1, L-2, and L-3 but is not identical to any of them. This indicates that a new lipoxygenase, L-4, is expressed in cotyledons.