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Plant Physiology 49:64-71 (1972)
© 1972 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

The Role of Protein Synthesis in the Senescence of Leaves

I. The Formation of Protease 1

Colin Martin2 and Kenneth V. Thimann

a Crown College, University of California, Santa Cruz, California 95060

The senescence of oat leaves has been studied by following the loss of chlorophyll and protein and the increase of {alpha}-amino nitrogen, after detachment and darkening. Protein synthesis and the amounts of proteolytic enzymes in the leaves have been determined directly. The process of senescence is shown to be a sequential one in which protein synthesis,most probably the formation of a proteolytic enzyme with L-serine in its active center, is of prime importance. The evidence is as follows. Firstly, L-serine specifically enhances senescence, especially in presence of kinetin. Secondly, cycloheximide, which inhibits protein synthesis in other systems, delays senescence and prevents the serine enhancement. Although requiring higher concentrations, cycloheximide can be as effective as kinetin in inhibiting senescence. It is shown directly that cycloheximide prevents protein synthesis in oat leaves under the same conditions as when it prevents senescence. Thirdly, leaves have been shown to contain two proteinases, with pH optima at 3 and 7.5, whose activity increases during senescence, even though the total leaf protein is decreasing. The amounts of both these enzymes present after 3 days are clearly increased by serine, and are greatly decreased by cycloheximide or by kinetin. The role of kinetin in delaying senescence thus may rest on its ability to suppress protease formation.


2 Present address, Department of Botany, University of Witwatersrand. Johannesburg, South Africa.

1 Research was supported in part by Grant GB-11867 from the National Science Foundation.







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Copyright © 1972 by the American Society of Plant Biologists