Publication | Open Access
Lipid composition of chloroplasts isolated by aqueous and nonaqueous techniques
44
Citations
21
References
1968
Year
Lipid AnalysisLipid BiophysicsEngineeringBotanyGlycobiologyPlant BiochemistryBiosynthesisTobacco LeavesLipid ChemistryPhotosynthesisChromatographyBiochemistryLipidsPhytochemistryBiomolecular EngineeringPlant MetabolismLipid CompositionBiologyNatural SciencesGlycerolipid CompositionG PelletPlant Physiology
Chloroplasts isolated from tobacco leaves in 0.5 M sucrose solution (the 1000 g pellet) contained 83% of the total cellular monogalactosyl diglyceride, 88% of the digalactosyl diglyceride, 76% of the sulfolipid, and 74% of the phosphatidyl glycerol. Phosphatidyl inositol was concentrated in the 15,000 g pellet. Phosphatidyl choline and phosphatidyl ethanolamine were concentrated in the 15,000 g supernatant fraction. Chloroplasts isolated from tobacco leaves by a nonaqueous technique in hexane-carbon tetrachloride show a glycerolipid composition similar to that found in chloroplasts isolated in the aqueous system, even though some lipid, particularly monogalactosyl diglyceride, is extracted by the organic solvent during the process.
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