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ARS Home » Midwest Area » Madison, Wisconsin » Cereal Crops Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #99873

Title: GERMINATED OAT PROTEINASES THAT HYDROLYZE OAT GLOBULINS

Author
item MARKKU, MIKOLA - UNIV OF HELSINKI, FINLAND
item Jones, Berne

Submitted to: Cereal Foods World
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 7/15/1999
Publication Date: N/A
Citation: N/A

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Germinated seeds provide nutrients to meet the needs of developing plantlets until they can take care of their own requirements. The seed reserve proteins and carbohydrates are located in the endosperm and, to be used, the insoluble storage proteins must be hydrolyzed into soluble forms that can be transported to the embryo. We are currently characterizing the eseed endoproteinases of malted oats that carry out these hydrolyses. A qualitative 2-D (IEF x PAGE) method that used gel-incorporated substrates, oat globulins, was used to study the enzymes that hydrolyze these major oat storage proteins and class-specific proteinase inhibitors were used to characterize the endoproteinases. There were at least ten individual activities that hydrolyzed the globulins at pH 3.8. One of the activities was due to an aspartic proteinase; the rest to cysteine proteinases. Although the overall pH of the germinated oat endosperm is 6.2, the large number of globulin-hydrolyzing proteinases that are active at pH 3.8 indicates that many of the active enzymes may be compartmentalized into acidic areas of the endosperm during seed germination.