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Robert P. Lundgard, Derek J. Baisted, Characterization of the Increased Lysophospholipase Activity in Gibberellic Acid-Treated Barley Aleurone Layers , Plant Physiology, Volume 74, Issue 4, April 1984, Pages 940–943, https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.74.4.940
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Abstract
A lysophospholipase (LPL) activity appears in the aleurone of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) half seeds during imbibition on moist agar. Secretion of LPL by half seeds is promoted by GA3; the increase in secretory rate is almost linear from 10−10 to 10−6 molar GA3. LPL activity is likewise promoted in isolated aleurone layers by GA3. Its secretion into the incubation medium requires the continued presence of GA3 and commences after a 10 to 14 hour lag period when 10 millimolar Ca2+ is present. In the absence of Ca2+, the lag period remains unchanged but attainment of the maximum secretory rate is delayed. Ca2+ alone has very little effect either on LPL activity accumulated in the aleurone layer or in the surrounding medium. However, 50 millimolar Ca2+ together with GA3 dramatically increase the level of secreted activity and of total (accumulated and secreted) activity.
The metabolic inhibitors cycloheximide and actinomycin D inhibit the accumulation of LPL activity in the aleurone and also the secreted activity. Actinomycin D added after the lag period results in a much lower inhibition. The increase in LPL activity in response to GA3 occurs as a result of de novo synthesis; LPL activity from barley half seeds incubated in 80% D2O in the presence of GA3 undergoes a shift to higher density compared with the activity from similar controls incubated in H2O. The characteristics of the GA3 enhancement of LPL activity are compared specifically with α-amylase and generally with other GA3-controlled hydrolases.
Supported by grants PCM 7818054 and 821596 from the National Science Foundation.