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ATPase in Lipid Body Membranes of Castor Bean Endosperm
Author(s) -
Matthew J. Hills,
Harry Beevers
Publication year - 1986
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.82.3.671
Subject(s) - endosperm , atpase , membrane , vanadate , oligomycin , pyrophosphate , chemistry , biochemistry , chromatography , hydrolysis , lipase , divalent , sodium azide , enzyme , pyrophosphatase , organic chemistry
Lipid body membranes purified from castor seed endosperm of dry seeds and 4 d old seedlings were found to have an ATPase activity associated with them. This was confirmed by equilibrium density centrifugation of the membranes using acid lipase as a marker enzyme. The specific activity ranged from 45 to 200 nanomoles per milligram protein per minute. The pH optimum was 9.0 but at pH 7.5 nearly 40% of the maximum activity was retained. The apparent K(m) for Mg-ATP was 0.5 millimolar. A divalent cation was required for activity and Mg(2+) was the most effective. Other nucleoside triphosphates were also hydrolyzed but there was no hydrolysis of pyrophosphate or p-nitrophenylphosphate. The ATPase was not inhibited by oligomycin, vanadate, dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, or molybdate but was inhibited by sodium azide. Washing the membranes with increasing concentrations of NaCl removed up to 60% of the ATPase activity but none was removed by 3 millimolar ethylene-diaminetetraacetate.

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