Abstrakt: |
Summary A quantitative ultrastructural study of the protein bodies of the lupin cotyledonary cells was performed to determine the protein content per cell. Two kinds of protein body were observed by transmission and scanning electron microscopy whatever the cellular type within the cotyledon. Some of these were conventional spherical structures, entirely filled with a dense protein matrix, others exhibited one large or several small light inclusions within the dense matrix. Even when a few light areas contained globoids, the majority remained of unknown nature, but could not be considered proteinaceous since they never reacted with specific protein dyes. The reserve protein content per cell was determined by image analysis on two seeds (L1 and L2) selected because they had a markedly different total protein content. The volume occupied by the dense matrix of the intracellular protein bodies was considered representative of the reserve protein quantity. The protein content per cell increased from the periphery to the centre of the cotyledon in the two seeds studied. The protein content per cell of the L2 seed was generally found to be greater than the L1 seed, in particular in the abaxial zone where it was markedly higher. The difference in total protein content of the two seeds was demonstrated to be primarily due to a differential alveolation of the protein bodies. These results will be used to study the relationship between the protein content of the cotyledonary cells and their nuclear DNA content. |