1968
DOI: 10.2183/pjab1945.44.358
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Acid Protease in Nepenthes

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Cited by 33 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Moreover, tests with silver nitrate showed Cl-to be present in the secretions of many pitchers. Recently, Nakayma and Amagase [2] described the partial purification of the acid protease from opened pitchers and in contrast with the results of earlier authors [3,4] and ours [ 1 ] , the Japanese workers could not find any proteolytic activity in the secretions of unopened pitchers. Thus, they could not exclude the bacterial origin of their protease.…”
Section: Resultscontrasting
confidence: 91%
“…Moreover, tests with silver nitrate showed Cl-to be present in the secretions of many pitchers. Recently, Nakayma and Amagase [2] described the partial purification of the acid protease from opened pitchers and in contrast with the results of earlier authors [3,4] and ours [ 1 ] , the Japanese workers could not find any proteolytic activity in the secretions of unopened pitchers. Thus, they could not exclude the bacterial origin of their protease.…”
Section: Resultscontrasting
confidence: 91%
“…AP have been purified and characterised from sterile pitcher fluid of several Nepenthes species ( Jentsch, 1972 ; Tokes, Woon & Chambers, 1974 ). In a study conducted by Nakayama & Amagase (1968) , a protease from pooled pitcher fluids of N. mixta and N. maxima was only partially purified and characterised due to insufficient amount. Amagase (1972) investigated aspartic proteases found in N. ampullaria, N. mixta, N. rafflesiana, N. maxima , and N. dyeriana compared to leaf extract from Drosera peltata .…”
Section: Secreted Proteases In Different Families Of Carnivorous Planmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They have primarily been reported from the pitcher fluid of Nepenthes plants [24,25], and account for the majority of protease activity in the fluid [26]. Purification and characterization of proteases from the pitcher fluid has confirmed that the protease activity was indeed mainly ascribed to nepenthesins [27][28][29]. Subsequently, cDNA clones of nepenthesins were characterized from Nepenthes alata [30] and N. gracilis [31,32].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%