Title of article
Invertase activity, grape berry development and cell compartmentation
Author/Authors
Dreier، نويسنده , , Luc P. and Hunter، نويسنده , , Jacobus J. and Ruffner، نويسنده , , Hans Peter، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Pages
8
From page
865
To page
872
Abstract
The effect of gibberellic acid on grape (Vitis vinifera L., ev. Sultanina) growth, β-fructofuranosidase (EC 3.2.1.26) activity and carbohydrate levels was investigated throughout berry development and ripening. Although the fruits responded to hormone application with the expected increase in size, growth was not correlated with enzymic activity and hexose accumulation. This suggests that there is no direct regulatory relationship between invertase and the rate of assimilate import. However, fructose:glucose ratios changed from 0.1 in green berries to 1.0 in mature samples. The latter situation can be reconciled with the 1:1 stoichiometry of sucrolysis by invertase. It is suggested that this is attributable to a spatial separation of substrate and enzyme in green tissue. Compartmentation studies indicate that mesocarp cell integrity gradually deteriorates during ripening, which allows invertase to leak out of the vacuole into the surrounding tissue. In fact, the protein fraction retrieved from a buffered medium after incubation of ripening berry slices contained a soluble invertase of presumably vacuolar origin with an acid pH-activity profile and a pI of about 4.
Keywords
methanol-chloroform-formic acid , PAGE , POLYACRYLAMIDE GEL ELECTROPHORESIS , polyethylene glycol , Cellular localisation , SDS , Ripening , Vitis vinifera , ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid , EDTA , DNSA , GA3 , gibberellic acid A3 , dinitrosalicylic acid , MCF , Invertase , , PEG
Journal title
Plant Physiology and Biochemistry
Serial Year
1998
Journal title
Plant Physiology and Biochemistry
Record number
2119680
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