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Plant Physiology 57:142-147 (1976) © 1976 American Society of Plant Biologists Separation and Characterization of Potato Lipid Acylhydrolases 1,2a Department of Biology and Molecular Biology Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90024
Three distinct potato (Solanum tuberosum) lipid acyl-hydrolases have been isolated and characterized. Nonfluorescent esters of the fluorescent alcohols, N-methylindoxyl and N-methylumbelliferone, have been used as convenient substrates for lipid acyl-hydrolase estimation. Enzyme I has been shown to be a neutral lipase which favors glyceryl triolein over the di- and monoolein, which shows no activity with phospho- and galactolipids and which favors long chain fatty acid esters of N-methylindoxyl over the butyrate ester. Enzyme II, while attacking glyceryl mono- and diolein, as well as favoring the butyrate ester of N-methylindoxyl over the myristate ester, is basically a phospholipid and galactolipid acyl-hydrolase. Enzyme III may reasonably be considered an esterase, since it hydrolyzes glyceryl monoolein exclusively among the neutral lipids, shows minimal activity on phospho- and galactolipids, and hydrolyzes N-methylindoxylbutyrate exclusively compared with N-methylindoxyl-myristate.
1 This work was supported in part by a United States Public Health Service International Postdoctoral Research Fellowship awarded to E.P.H. and by Atomic Energy Commission Contract AT(04-3)-34 PA 61 (G.G.L.). 2 In honor of Leon Bernstein - warm friend, dedicated plant physiologist, and devoted editor.
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