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Plant Physiol, May 2001, Vol. 126, pp. 176-187 Sulfur Assimilation in Developing Lupin Cotyledons Could Contribute Significantly to the Accumulation of Organic Sulfur Reserves in the SeedCommonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, Plant Industry, G.P.O. Box 1600, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia (L.M.T.); and Laboratoire Mixte Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique-Aventis, Unité Mixte de Recherche 1932, Aventis CropScience, 14-20 Rue Pierre Baizet BP 9163, 69263 Lyon cedex 03, France (M.D.)
It is currently assumed that the assimilation of sulfur into reduced forms occurs predominantly in the leaves of plants. However, developing seeds have a strong requirement for sulfur amino acids for storage protein synthesis. We have assessed the capacity of developing seeds of narrow-leaf lupin (Lupinus angustifolius) for sulfur assimilation. Cotyledons of developing lupin seeds were able to transfer the sulfur atom from 35S-labeled sulfate into seed proteins in vitro, demonstrating the ability of the developing cotyledons to perform all the steps of sulfur reduction and sulfur amino acid biosynthesis. Oxidized sulfur constituted approximately 30% of the sulfur in mature seeds of lupins grown in the field and almost all of the sulfur detected in phloem exuded from developing pods. The activities of three enzymes of the sulfur amino acid biosynthetic pathway were found in developing cotyledons in quantities theoretically sufficient to account for all of the sulfur amino acids that accumulate in the protein of mature lupin seeds. We conclude that sulfur assimilation by developing cotyledons is likely to be an important source of sulfur amino acids for the synthesis of storage proteins during lupin seed maturation.
The sulfur-containing amino acid Met
is essential for animal nutrition, but is present in limiting amounts
in many plants used for feed. This is particularly true of legume seeds
(Waddell, 1958 Plants take up sulfur from the soil, mainly in the form of sulfate.
After transport into roots via trans-membrane transporters (Smith et
al., 1995
The re-distribution of sulfur within plants under conditions of sulfur
nutritional deficiency has been extensively studied (Zhao et al., 1996 The aims of this study were to determine whether developing lupin seeds are capable of sulfur reduction and assimilation into amino acids, and to estimate the quantitative importance of sulfur assimilation in developing cotyledons to the accumulation of the stored, organic sulfur in the mature lupin seed. We demonstrate here that the sulfur arriving in developing lupin pods, via the phloem, is predominantly in an oxidized, rather than a reduced form. Developing cotyledons were able to incorporate sulfur atoms from sulfate into protein, demonstrating their capacity for sulfur reduction and sulfur amino acid biosynthesis in vitro. The activities of three enzymes of the sulfur amino acid biosynthetic pathway were found in developing cotyledons in quantities theoretically sufficient to account for all of the sulfur amino acids that accumulate in the protein of mature lupin seeds. We postulate that sulfur assimilation by developing cotyledons themselves is an important source of sulfur amino acids for the synthesis of lupin seed storage proteins.
Quantification of Sulfur in Organs of Lupin X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (XRFS) was used to quantify
oxidized and reduced sulfur in lupin seeds. XRFS is a fast and reliable
technique for determining the content of sulfur in plant material. For
S, the K Mature seeds from lupins grown in pots of soil with a gypsum supplement contained 116 µmol of atomic sulfur per gram of dry weight. Over 40% of this sulfur was in an oxidized form (Table I). Similar results were obtained for seed from lupins grown in sand and watered with nutrient solution containing 3 mM MgSO4. Sulfur was also measured in seed from lupins grown in the field over two seasons. The sulfur content of the field-grown seed was lower than that of the greenhouse-grown lupins, but oxidized sulfur still contributed a substantial proportion (over 25%) of the total (Table I). The reduced sulfur contents were similar in the lupin seeds grown in all three conditions.
The sulfur contents of other lupin organs were quantified by analyzing freeze-dried samples of leaves, upper lateral stems, pods, and developing seeds of plants grown in sand and watered with 3 mM sulfate. All organs contained significant amounts of oxidized S: in most cases oxidized S constituted 30% to 50% of the total sulfur detected (Table II). In the upper lateral stems, oxidized S was extremely abundant, constituting 1.47% of the organ dry weight. Leaves and pooled, whole, developing seeds (representing a range of stages from early to late maturation) contained relatively high concentrations of reduced sulfur (Table II). In developing seeds that were dissected into cotyledon and testa, the higher concentrations of reduced and oxidized sulfur were found to be in the cotyledon. Testa, pod, and stem all contained relatively low concentrations of reduced sulfur, probably reflecting a lower protein content than the other organs.
Quantification of Sulfur in Lupin Phloem Exudates Sulfur in phloem exudates from developing pods aged between 21 and
35 DAF was quantified by XRFS after drying onto cellulose powder. The
concentration of sulfur in the original liquid sample was calculated
and was corrected using a calibration curve derived from measuring the
sulfur in standard solutions. Samples of the standards were dried onto
cellulose, and then quantified using XRFS. The values obtained for the
amount of sulfur in the solid sample (micrograms per gram of dry
weight) were used to calculate the apparent concentration of sulfur in
the original solution. These calculated figures were plotted against
the known concentrations of sulfur in the standards. The
regression equations were for Na2SO4, y
(observed concentration) = 1.11x (known concentration) The XRFS method slightly under-estimated the concentrations of oxidized and reduced sulfur in the standard solutions. The detection limits were approximately 1.5 mM for oxidized sulfur and 0.5 mM for reduced sulfur. Millimolar concentrations of sulfur were found in the phloem of three cultivars of narrow-leaf lupin. All the sulfur detected was in the oxidized form (Table III). Reduced sulfur was below the detection limit of the XRFS method; therefore, more sensitive methods were used to quantify specific reduced sulfur metabolites in phloem. Glutathione was quantified using the GR-DTNB recycling method and was found to be present at concentrations of approximately 100 µM (Table III) in phloem from all three lupin cultivars. HPLC analysis after derivitization with O-phthaldialdehyde was used to quantify SMM in lupin phloem. The results showed an expected predominance of Asn and Gln, however, SMM was not detectable. SMM was reliably detected by XRFS and by HPLC of O-phthaldyal-dehyde adducts when added to phloem samples. The HPLC method would have detected SMM present at micromolar concentrations in the phloem. Met was present in concentrations similar to those of glutathione (results not shown). HPLC analysis after derivatization with monobromobimane was also used to confirm that significant quantities of other thiols such as Cys or inorganic reduced sulfur compounds were not present in lupin phloem. Glutathione (approximately 100 µM) was the most abundant thiol in the phloem (results not shown).
Incorporation of 35S from Sulfate into Seed Proteins in Developing Cotyledons Cotyledons from developing lupin seeds in the early (18 DAF) or
late (35 DAF) stages of seed storage protein accumulation were
incubated with [35S]sulfate. The incorporation
of 35S into proteins was demonstrated by
extraction of total protein and analysis by SDS-PAGE and fluorography
(Fig. 2). Protein bands of a molecular
mass of approximately 14,000 to 20,000 were strongly labeled in
the older seeds. These bands may correspond to lupin seed storage
proteins that are relatively rich in Cys, for example conglutin
Enzymes of the Sulfur Amino Acid Biosynthetic Pathway in Organs of Lupin The activities of three enzymes of the pathway of sulfur amino
acid biosynthesis were assayed in extracts from leaves, pods, and
cotyledons or testa from developing seeds of lupins grown in soil. The
plant organs were all harvested when the developing seeds were aged
approximately 30 DAF, that is, during the phase of rapid accumulation
of seed storage proteins. The three enzymes that were assayed were Ser
acetyltransferase (SAT), which supplies the amino acid skeleton for Cys
biosynthesis; O-acetyl-Ser (thiol) lyase (OASTL), which
catalyzes the combination of O-acetyl-Ser and sulfide to
form Cys; and cystathionine The three enzyme activities were detected in all organs tested.
The specific activity of SAT was highest in pod, followed by cotyledon,
testa, and fully expanded leaf (Fig. 3A).
OASTL-specific activity was similar in cotyledon and testa of
developing seed and in leaves, with the lowest specific activity in the
pod (Fig. 3B). The specific activity of OASTL in lupin leaves and
developing seeds was approximately two orders of magnitude higher than
that of SAT. Similar absolute and relative levels of SAT and OASTL have
been reported in crude extracts of pea leaf protoplasts (Ruffet et al.,
1995
Activities of Enzymes of the Sulfur Amino Acid Biosynthetic Pathway throughout Maturation of Lupin Seeds Developing seeds from lupins grown in conditions of defined mineral nutrition with adequate sulfur supply were harvested at a range of stages spanning the phase of storage protein accumulation (Fig. 4). The seed storage conglutins accumulated from 24 DAF onwards and dominated the total seed protein profiles in later stages (data not shown). The total protein content of the developing seeds increased with age, due to the accumulation of storage proteins (Fig. 4).
The activities of SAT, OASTL, and CBL were assayed in low-salt extracts
from the developing seeds. To avoid distortion of specific activity
estimates by the accumulation of storage proteins in older seeds we
quantified enzyme activities in terms of low-salt-soluble protein that
excluded the bulk of the seed storage proteins. Under the extraction
and de-salting conditions used, the majority of the seed storage
proteins were not soluble; therefore, the protein concentrations of the
extracts were similar for all stages of developing seeds (protein
concentrations for 18, 21, 24, 27, 30, 35, and 39 or 40 DAF extracts
were 7.4, 8.8, 6.4, 7.5, 7.3, 8.6, and 5.8 mg protein
mL The specific activity of SAT was highest in young seeds, but declined as development proceeded (Fig. 5A). The level of OASTL was fairly uniform throughout seed development, tailing off slightly at 40 DAF (Fig. 5B). The specific activity of CBL was relatively constant in developing seeds at the beginning, middle, and end of storage protein accumulation (Fig. 5C). The activities of the three enzymes in developing seeds were compared with the activities of the same enzymes in other organs from the same plants. The levels of all three enzymes were generally as high or higher in developing seeds at mid-maturation, as in fully expanded leaves or in roots. This was true whether enzyme activity was expressed in terms of low-salt-soluble protein, chlorophyll, dry weight, or fresh weight (Table IV).
Organic Sulfur in Mature Lupin Seeds The total amino acid content was determined in acid-hydrolyzed samples of mature lupin seed flour (Table V). We aimed to determine whether the observed activities of sulfur pathway enzymes in seeds were large enough to account for a significant proportion of the total Cys and Met accumulated by the mature lupin seed. We calculated the theoretical maximum amount of product that could be produced by each of the three enzymes examined in this study over the period of development during which seed storage proteins accumulated (Table VI). From these calculations it was deduced that, at least judging from maximal enzyme activities in vitro, the amounts of SAT, OASTL, and CBL in the developing lupin seeds were more than sufficient to account for all the sulfur amino acid stored in protein in the mature seeds.
The pathway of sulfur assimilation is now well characterized in
plants (Fig. 1). It is generally accepted that the energy for sulfur
reduction comes from coupling with photosynthetic electron transport.
On a whole-plant level, it is, therefore, assumed that sulfur reduction
and sulfur amino acid biosynthesis occur largely in the leaves (Hell,
1997 Seeds accumulate reserves of carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur during
maturation. Developing seeds import carbon and nitrogen that was
assimilated into reduced forms in other parts of the plant, most
notably the leaves. Less is known about the sulfur nutrition of
developing seeds. It has been reported that soybean seeds could be
cultured in vitro with sulfate as their sole sulfur source (Holowach et
al., 1984 In the present study we adopted a quantitative approach to assessing
the importance of sulfur assimilation in the seeds of narrow-leaf lupin
in vivo. It was demonstrated that oxidized S represents a significant
pool of sulfur in lupin seeds under a range of growing conditions, and
that phloem supplying developing lupin pods contained sulfur
predominantly in the oxidized form. The phloem stream has been
estimated to supply approximately 90% of the nitrogen that accumulates
in fruits of white lupin (Pate et al., 1977 We report that developing lupin cotyledons are capable of utilizing the
sulfur atom from sulfate in protein synthesis. It can, therefore, be
deduced that developing lupin cotyledons are able to perform all the
steps of sulfur reduction from sulfate to sulfide, as well as the
subsequent steps of sulfur amino acid biosynthesis (see Fig. 1). We
directly demonstrated the presence, in developing lupin seeds, of the
two enzymes responsible for Cys biosynthesis. SAT catalyzes the initial
reaction that activates Ser to produce O-acetyl-Ser, an
important intermediate shown to have a key role in the control of the
entire pathway of sulfur uptake and assimilation in plants (Saito,
2000 We attempted to estimate the quantitative contribution of sulfur assimilation in developing seeds to the accumulated store of organic sulfur in the mature lupin seed. The specific activities of SAT, OASTL, and CBL were generally as high or higher in developing seeds as they were in photosynthetic source leaves from the same plants grown under sulfur-adequate conditions in soil (Fig. 3) or in sand watered with nutrient (Table IV). A similar conclusion was reached when enzyme activities were compared on the basis of chlorophyll content, dry weight, or fresh weight, all of which vary with time in developing seeds. However, the critical question is whether the enzyme activities measured in developing seeds are sufficient to account for the quantity of sulfur amino acids that accumulate during the course of maturation. To answer this question, the total activity of each enzyme was integrated over the period of seed maturation and storage protein accumulation (Table VI). The calculated capacity of the lupin seeds for sulfur amino acid synthesis can be compared with the actual quantities of organic sulfur found in the mature seeds (Table V). The maximal activities of SAT, OASTL, and CBL measured in developing lupin seeds were theoretically more than sufficient to supply all of the sulfur amino acids that accumulate in storage proteins during maturation. These calculations obviously represent only approximate maxima for these activities since they are derived using maximal rates of enzyme activity measured in protein extracts in vitro. This ignores the in vivo regulation of enzyme activities mediated by endogenous regulators such as products and substrates. Furthermore, we have measured total enzyme activities in crude extracts, thereby pooling the activities of the multiple isoforms of each enzyme that are known to be present in different subcellular compartments. In the case of SAT, the total enzyme activity found in crude extracts
of pea leaf protoplasts was divided between the plastids (10% of
total), the cytosol (14%), and the mitochondria (76%, Ruffet et al.,
1995 Within the lupin seed, higher activities of SAT, OASTL, and CBL were found in the cotyledon, compared with the testa (Fig. 3). The cotyledon is embryonic tissue and is the site of synthesis of the seed storage proteins. At mid-maturation (30 DAF), the testa contributed 40% of the fresh and dry weight of the whole seed, but less than 10% of the SAT or CBL activity, and approximately 14% of the total OASTL activity in the seed. In addition, almost all of the chlorophyll in developing seeds was found in the cotyledon (results not shown), so if photosynthetic electron transport does contribute reducing power for sulfur reduction in the seed, this process would be more likely to be occurring in the cotyledon than in the testa. At 30 DAF, the pod wall contributed as much of the total weight of the fruit as did the seeds, in plants grown in soil. The average dry weight of each seed was 76.4 mg, whereas the average dry weight of pod, per seed, was 72.2 mg. Despite its relatively large mass, the pod wall contributed only 10% as much CBL activity and 30% as much OASTL activity as the cotyledons, on a per seed basis. The pod contained a relatively high SAT-specific activity (Fig. 3); however, protein concentration in the pod was relatively low (extractable protein = 2.9% of dry weight versus 7.3% of dry weight for the cotyledon), so on a per fruit basis, total SAT activity was actually higher in the cotyledons than in the pod. Our work does not specifically address the role of the pod in the
sulfur nutrition of developing seeds in lupin. In a study focussed on
the distribution of sulfur in soybean during seed filling, it was
argued that sulfate was assimilated in developing soybean pods and
delivered to the expanding seeds as homoglutathione, under
sulfur-limited growth conditions (Sunarpi and Anderson, 1997 In summary, we have demonstrated that developing lupin seeds contain
large stores of oxidized S, that they are capable of utilizing the
sulfur from sulfate in protein synthesis, and that they are therefore
capable of all the steps of sulfur reduction and sulfur amino acid
biosynthesis. Oxidized S was the dominant form of sulfur found in the
phloem supplying pods during lupin seed development. Quantification of
three enzymes central to the sulfur amino acid biosynthetic pathway
indicated that developing lupin cotyledons have the potential to
synthesize a significant part of the Cys and Met stored in mature lupin
seeds. The accumulation of oxidized S in lupin seeds grown in
sulfur-adequate conditions indicates that the rate of import of
oxidized S exceeds the rate of reduction of sulfur in the cotyledon.
This may be a limitation to the sulfur amino acid content of the seeds.
Modification of the pathway of sulfur assimilation in developing seeds
may, therefore, be a useful approach to improving the sulfur amino acid
content, and hence the nutritional value of pulse seeds. Oxidized S
accumulated in mature lupin seeds may act as a reserve for germination;
however, it is not essential for successful germination, as
demonstrated by the normal germination rate of lupin seeds lacking
oxidized S after growth under conditions of sulfur limitation (results not shown). Our findings with narrow-leaf lupin might be expected to
apply to other pulses with large, green seeds. However, the sulfur
nutrition of cereal grains would probably be different, judging from
the predominance of reduced sulfur in the phloem of rice and wheat
(Bourgis et al., 1999
Plant Material Narrow-leaf lupins (Lupinus angustifolius L. cv Warrah) were grown under several different conditions to generate material for this study. Soil-Grown Plants Lupins were grown in soil containing 0.6 g L 1
slow-release fertilizer ("Aboska," containing 15.2% [w/w]
nitrogen, 6.9% [w/w] phosphorus, and 5.2% [w/w] potassium
sulfate) in 25-cm pots in a controlled temperature greenhouse at 23°C
during the day (12 h) and 18°C during the night. Each pot, containing
9 L of soil, received a supplement of 2 g of solid calcium sulfate
(gypsum), which was applied to the surface of the soil when the plants
started to flower. The phloem samples and the seeds used for labeling with 35S (see below) were from lupin plants grown in soil
as described, except that they did not receive a supplement of calcium
sulfate. All these plants are referred to as soil-grown lupins. In
addition, an analysis of sulfur content only was performed on mature
seeds from lupins grown in the field at Wongan Hills in Western Australia.
Nutrient-Fed Plants Six lupin (cv Warrah) plants were grown in a controlled-temperature greenhouse at 23°C during the day (12 h) and 18°C during the night, in separate 25-cm pots with a mixture of 50% (v/v) washed river sand and 50% (v/v) perlite, and were watered with defined nutrient solution. The plants were watered for 4 weeks after sowing with solution containing 0.3 mM MgSO4, 4 mM KNO3, 4 mM Ca(NO3)2, 1 mM Na(K) H2PO4, 0.1 mM ferric citrate/EDTA, 37 µM H3BO3, 10 µM MnCl2, 1.5 µM ZnCl2, 0.6 µM CuCl2, and 0.2 µM H2MoO4. The plants were subsequently watered with the same basal nutrient containing 3 mM instead of 0.3 mM MgSO4. All pots were watered with 300 to 600 mL of nutrient once a day (until liquid started to drain from the pots) for 6 d a week. On the 7th d, plants received 600 mL of deionized water. In addition, during the second 3 months of growth, all pots were flushed with 600 mL of deionized water twice a week.Sample Preparation Phloem exudate samples were collected from developing pods aged
between 21 and 35 DAF from soil-grown plants using the method of Pate
et al. (1974) Pooled samples of leaves, pods, or developing seeds were collected from each group of soil-grown or nutrient-fed plants at various stages of development. Some of the seeds were dissected into cotyledons and testa. Each sample consisted of approximately 50 individual leaves or seeds representing several plants. Pod material represented approximately 12 to 15 individual pods at the same stage of development as the appropriate seed sample. The leaf samples used for enzyme analysis consisted of 10 to 15 g fresh weight of fully expanded leaves harvested on the same day as the 30 DAF seed samples. Between 5 and 23 g of leaf, stem, root, and developing pods with seeds were collected, for determination of sulfur content, from a single nutrient-fed plant on the same day as the 40 DAF seed sample. Enzyme analysis was also done on the root sample. All samples were frozen in liquid nitrogen and were then freeze-dried. The dried samples were conserved in a sealed container, with silica gel, at 4°C for between 6 and 10 weeks, and then at room temperature for 1 week, before analysis. Seeds were harvested fresh for labeling with [35S]sulfate. Determination of Sulfur by XRFS Solid Samples Mature lupin seed samples weighing approximately 6 g (approximately 40 seeds) were milled to fine flour using a UDY Cyclone mill with a 0.5-mm screen. Other plant tissues were freeze-dried, and then pulverized using a puck mill. Powdered samples were compressed into aluminum planchettes or backed with solid boric acid. Total sulfur, reduced sulfur, and oxidized sulfur were determined using a spectrometer (PW 1404, Philips, Natick, MA) as described by Pinkerton et al. (1989)Liquid Samples Liquid samples were analyzed by dripping 150 to 300 µL of liquid onto approximately 350 mg of cellulose powder, drying it in a 60°C oven for 24 h, and then milling it to homogeneity in a puck mill. The concentration of sulfur in the original solution was calculated and compared with values calculated for the sulfur concentrations of standard solutions containing 300 mM Suc (to mimic the composition of phloem) and varying concentrations of sulfate or glutathione. Quantification of reduced sulfur gave the same results whether it was in the form of reduced glutathione (GSH), oxidized glutathione, or Met (results not shown). The solutions used for construction of a calibration curve were as follows: standard 1: 300 mM Suc, 5 mM GSH, and 5 mM Na2SO4; standard 2: 300 mM Suc, 2.5 mM GSH, and 7.5 mM Na2SO4; and standard 3: 300 mM Suc, 7.5 mM GSH, and 2.5 mM Na2SO4. Powdered samples were backed with solid boric acid and compressed in a die. Sulfur was quantified using XRFS as described above.Determination of Glutathione by the GR-DTNB Recycling Method Glutathione was measured using the spectrophotometric GR-DTNB
recycling assay described by Noctor and Foyer (1998) Labeling Lupin Cotyledons with [35S]Sulfate Developing seeds aged approximately 18 and 35 DAF were harvested
from lupins grown in soil. These seed ages corresponded to early and
late stages of seed storage protein accumulation, respectively (Gayler
et al., 1984 Protein samples were electrophoresed on SDS-polyacrylamide
gradient mini-gels (15%-30% [w/v] acrylamide) with equal numbers of TCA-insoluble counts loaded in each track. The gels were
fluorographed after soaking in 20% (w/v) naphthalene, 0.5% (w/v)
2,5-diphenyloxazole in dimethylsulfoxide (Gill et al., 1981 Protein Extraction Dried samples were ground to a fine powder in liquid
nitrogen. For enzyme activity measurements protein was
extracted from 250 to 500 mg dry weight of powder into 3.5 mL
of a buffer containing 50 mM
HEPES [4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid]-NaOH, pH
7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 5 mM MgCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT), and 100 µM pyridoxal
phosphate. Each extract was desalted on a Sephadex G25 column (PD-10,
Pharmacia, Uppsala), eluted in 50 mM HEPES-NaOH, pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 5 mM MgCl2, and 0.1 mM DTT, and stored in aliquots at Enzyme Assays SAT activity was assayed in a coupled reaction with excess
purified, recombinant OASTL as described by Droux et al. (1998) OASTL activity was assayed as described (Droux et al., 1998 CBL activity was assayed by measuring the rate of hydrolysis of
cystathionine to homo-Cys using HPLC (Droux et al., 1995 Analysis of Amino Acid Composition The amino acid composition of mature seeds was determined by complete hydrolysis of finely ground flour (with or without a prior oxidation step to convert Met residues to Met sulfone and Cys residues to cysteic acid). Oxidation was performed as follows. Oxidation mixture consisting of 0.5 mL of 30% (w/v) hydrogen peroxide and 4.5 mL of formic acid was prepared and kept for at least 1 h at room temperature in the dark. A sample of lupin flour weighing 100 mg was transferred to a 200-mL glass tube and the tube and the oxidation mixture were chilled in an ice bath. The oxidation mixture was added to the flour sample and was incubated on ice for 4 h, after which excess performic acid was destroyed by the addition of 0.8 g of sodium metabisulphite. After the oxidation step, the sample was hydrolyzed by adding 100 mL of 6 N HCl and boiling in a heating block at 120°C for 24 h. The sample was adjusted to a 200-mL volume, and then a 10-mL aliquot was evaporated to dryness and redissolved in 5 mL of water. The evaporation was repeated four times to eliminate any residual HCl. The sample was finally dissolved in 25 mL of lithium citrate buffer (9.4 g of tri-lithium citrate tetrahydrate, 7.4 g of citric acid in 1 L of 2% [w/v] thiodiglycol, pH 2.2, with HCl). The amino acids were separated and quantified using a autoanalyser (Beckman Instruments, Fullerton, CA) and post-column derivatization with ninhydrin.
We gratefully acknowledge Dr. Francis Pierre and staff (Aventis Animal Nutrition, Commentry, France) for the analysis of total sulfur amino acid composition of lupin flour samples. Sincere thanks to Dr. Charles Hocart for his help with HPLC analysis and to Drs John Lunn, T.J. Higgins, and Don Spencer for helpful comments on the manuscript.
Received October 19, 2000; returned for revision December 3, 2000; accepted February 1, 2001. * Corresponding author; e-mail L.Tabe{at}pi.csiro.au; fax 61-2-62465000.
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