Abstract
Inactivation of mitochondria in the castor bean seed endosperm during ripening. — The present research deals with the behaviour of mitochondria from the endosperm of castor bean seeds, during the last phases of seed maturation. The activities of citochrome oxidase, of malate dehydrogenase, of the succinate-citochrome c reductase system, and the phosphorylating activity, were chosen as tests of the state of mitochondria. The results obtained show an increase of the first two activities up to the moment when some ovular tissues are still present, and, successively, a more or less rapid inactivation of the three enzymes investigated, which fall to extremely low values in the dry seed. Also the phosphorylating capacity, high during the first phases, drops quickly as the seed approches to dormancy. A certain amount of citochrome oxidase is revealed in the supernatant from 20000xg centrifugation made to prepare the mitochondrial fraction; its activity gradually increases as the seed advances to ripeness. A further fractionation of the activity not sedimenting at 20000xg reveals that approximately one half of it sediments when centrifugated for 1 hour at 50000xg, while the other half remains in the supernatant. The particles sedimenting between 20000 and 50000xg show very little, if any, phosphorylating capacity (with succinate). It is suggested that the gradual inactivation of mitochondrial efficiency during the ripening phase is due to a degradation of mithochondrial structures.