Plant Physiol. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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Plant Physiology 60:329-333 (1977)
© 1977 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Gluconeogenesis from Storage Wax in the Cotyledons of Jojoba Seedlings 1

Robert A. Moreau and Anthony H. C. Huang

a Department of Biology, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina 29208

The cotyledons of jojoba (Simmondsia chinensis) seeds contained 50 to 60% of their weight as intracellular wax esters. During germination there was a gradual decrease in the wax content with a concomitant rise in soluble carbohydrates, suggesting that the wax played the role of a food reserve. Thin layer chromatography revealed that both the fatty alcohol and fatty acid were metabolized. The disappearance of wax was matched with an increase of catalase, a marker enzyme of the gluconeogenic process in other fatty seedlings. Subcellular organelles were isolated by sucrose gradient centrifugation from the cotyledons at the peak stage of germination. The enzymes of the beta oxidation of fatty acid and of the glyoxylate cycle were localized in the glyoxysomes but not in the mitochondria. The glyoxysomes had specific activities of individual enzymes similar to those of the castor bean glyoxysomes. An active alkaline lipase was detected in the wax bodies at the peak stage of germination but not in the ungerminated seeds. No lipase was detected in glyoxysomes or mitochondria. After the wax in the wax bodies had been extracted with diethyl ether, the organelle membrane was isolated and it still retained the alkaline lipase. The gluconeogenesis from wax in the jojoba seedling appears to be similar, but with modification, to that from triglyceride in other fatty seedlings.


1 This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant BMS 75-02320.




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J. G. Metz, M. R. Pollard, L. Anderson, T. R. Hayes, and M. W. Lassner
Purification of a Jojoba Embryo Fatty Acyl-Coenzyme A Reductase and Expression of Its cDNA in High Erucic Acid Rapeseed
Plant Physiology, March 1, 2000; 122(3): 635 - 644.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1977 by the American Society of Plant Biologists