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1.
Turnover of cell wall polysaccharides of a Vinca rosea suspension culture   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Turnover of cell wall components was examined in two growth phases of a batch suspension culture of Vinca rosea L. Three-day-cultured cells (cell division phase) and 5-day-cultured cells (cell expansion phase) were incubated with d -[U-14C]glucose. After various periods of incubation, extra-cellular polysaccharides (ECP) and cell walls were isolated, and then the cell walls were fractionated to pectic substance, hemicellulose, and cellulose fractions. The results of the measurement of radioactivities and amounts of total carbohydrate in the ECP and cell wall fractions indicated that synthesis of pectic substance was more active in the cell division phase than in the cell expansion phase. From the results of the pulse-chase experiments, in which cells prelabelled by incubation with d -[U-14C]glucose for 3 h were incubated in a medium containing unlabelled glucose for various periods, the gross degradation, net synthesis, and gross synthesis of cell wall components were estimated. Active degradation and synthesis were observed in the hemicellulose fraction, indicating that active turnover occurred in the hemicellulose fraction, while little degradation was found in the pectic substance and cellulose fractions.  相似文献   

2.
Endosperm cell walls were isolated from rice grains and their chemical composition was analyzed. The cell walls were composed of cellulose microfibrils and matrix phase which consisted of hemicellulose and pectic substances. Hemicellulose mainly comprised arabinoxylan, accompanied by a small amount of glucose-containing polysaccharide. Pectic substances contained polygalacturonides, some of which had side chains containing neutral sugars such as galactose and arabinose. Amino acid analysis of these fractions suggested that hydroxyproline-containing glycoproteins were contained in these cell walls and firmly bound to cellulose microfibrils.  相似文献   

3.
The sugar composition of pollen grain and pollen tube cell walls was studied for Camellia japonica, C. sasanqua, C. sinensis, Tulipa gesneriana and Lilium longiflorum. In all species, the main components of pollen grain walls were arabinose, galactose, glucose and uronic acid. On the other hand, the pollen tube walls consisted mostly of glucose. The pollen tube wall of C. japonica was fractionated into hemicellulose, α-cellulose and pectic substance fractions in yields of 61, 19 and 3 %, respectively. The hemicellulose fraction was composed essentially of glucose. The sugar composition of the pollen tube wall was not influenced by the nature of exogenously supplied sugars. Rapid growth of the pollen tube seemed to correlate with the synthesis of hemicellulosic glucan.  相似文献   

4.
The Hw pectic fraction, extracted with hot water, is the major component of 4 days old epicotyl cell walls of Cicer arietinum L. cv. Castellana and is formed of arabinose and galactose, with smaller amounts of rhamnose, xylose, glucose and mannose. The cell wall 2βIII enzymatic fraction, with β-galactosidase activity (EC 3.2.1.23) and the main enzyme responsible for the autolytic process, essentially acts on the Hw fraction, and is able to hydrolyze 560 μg of this fraction per g of epicotyls, releasing mainly galactose as monosaccharide.
The 2βIII fraction acts very weakly on the other polysaccharide fractions of the cell wall, both pectic and hemicellulosic, releasing 80, 60 and 14 μg per g of epicotyls from the fractions extracted with oxalate (Ox), KOH 10% (KI) and KOH 24% (KII), respectively. It can be concluded that the natural substrate of this enzyme is the Hw pectic fraction, probably an arabinogalactan that is found in the cell wall in isolated form or as side chains of the rhamnogalacturonan I.  相似文献   

5.
When leaf disks from haploid plants of Nicotiana plumbaginifolia Viv. were transformed with T-DNA and cultured on shoot-inducing medium, nonorganogenic callus. designated nolac (for non-organogenic callus with loosely attached cells), appeared on approximately 7% of leaf disks. In contrast, normal callus was generated on T-DNA-transformed leaf disks from diploid plants and on non-transformed leaf disks from haploid and diploid plants. Transmission electron microscopy revealed that the middle lamellae and the cell walls of one line of mutant callus (nolac-H14) were barely stained by ruthenium red. even after demethylesterification with NaOH, whereas the entire cell wall and the middle lamella were strongly stained in normal callus. In cultures of nolac-H14 callus, the level of sugar components of pectic polysaccharides in the hemicellulose fraction was reduced and that in the culture medium was elevated, as compared with cultures of normal callus. These results indicate that pectic polysaccharides are not retained in the cell walls and middle lamellae of nolac-H14 callus. In nolac-H14, the ratio of arabinose to galactose was low in the pectic polysaccharides purified from all cell wall fractions and from the medium, in particular, in the hemicellulose fractions. The low levels of arabinofuranosyl (T-Araf, 5-Araf, 2,5-Araf, and 3,5-Araf) residues in the pectic polysaccharides of the hemicellulosic fraction of nolac-H,14 indicated that no neutral-sugar side chains, composed mainly of linear arabinan. were present in nolac-H14. Arabinose-rich pectins. which are strongly associated with cellulose-hemicellulose complexes, might play an important role in intercellular attachment in the architecture of the cell wall.  相似文献   

6.
Changes in mechanical properties and chemical nature of the cell walls of the different zones along elongating maize ( Zea mays L. cv. LG 11) roots were analyzed and the following results were obtained. (1) The apical region 2 to 5 mm from the tip of 15 mm long roots showed rapid elongation whereas the region 8–10 mm from the tip showed very little growth. (2) The minimum stress-relaxation time (To) and the mean stress-relaxation rate (R) of the cell wall were small whereas the maximum stress-relaxation time (Tm) was large in the region where cell elongation was optimum. The To and R increased and the Tm decreased gradually towards the base of the root. (3) The amounts of non-cellulosic polysaccharides of the cell wall were highest in the region 1.5–2.5 mm from the tip, decreasing until 5 mm from the tip, and then increasing towards the base. However, the proportion of this fraction in the total cell wall polysaccharides was highest in the extreme tip (cap and meristem, 0–1 mm) and decreased towards the base. (4) Major neutral sugars constituting the non-cellulosic polysaccharides of the cell wall were xylose, arabinose, galactose and glucose, with minor amounts of rhamnosc. mannose and fucose. The 1–15 mm region was on the whole rich in glucose and xylose and contained arabinose to a lesser extent. However, the chemical nature in the apical region, (0–2 mm, was rather special, being rich in galactose and fucose. (5) The cell wall of maize roots contained, as a whole, only little pectic substances but was high in hemicellulose 1 (rich in xylose, arabinose and glucose) and hemicellulose 2 (rich in glucose and xylose). (6) It appeared that in the elongating region (apical 2 to 5 mm) the cell elongation rate (CET) showed a rather good correlation with the parameters of mechanical properties (To, Tm and R) and with neutral sugar compositions in the non-cellulosic polysaccharides.  相似文献   

7.
R. M. Roberts  F. Loewus 《Plant physiology》1966,41(9):1489-1495,1497-1498
Prolonged growth of cell cultures of sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus L.) on agar medium containing myo-inositol-2-3H resulted in incorporation of label predominately into uronosyl and pentosyl units of cell wall polysaccharides. Procedures normally used to distinguish between pectic substance and hemicellulose yielded carbohydrate-rich fractions with solubility characteristics ranging from pectic substance to hemicellulose yet the uronic acid and pentose composition of these fractions was decidedly pectic. Galacturonic acid was the only uronic acid present in each fraction. Subfractionation of alkali-soluble (hemicellulosic) polysaccharide by neutralization followed by ethanol precipitation gave 3 fractions, a water-insoluble, an ethanol-insoluble, and an ethanol-soluble fraction, each progressively poorer in galacturonic acid units and progressively richer in arabinose units; all relatively poor in xylose units.  相似文献   

8.
Changes in the composition of cotton fibre cell walls during development   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
H. R. Huwyler  G. Franz  H. Meier 《Planta》1979,146(5):635-642
Purified cell walls, prepared from cotton fibres (Gossypium arboreum L.) at different growth stages, were subjected to successive extractions to give pectic, hemicellulosic, and -cellulosic fractions. The protein content and sugars obtained after hydrolysis of the total cell walls and of the various fractions were quantitatively estimated. The amount of protein in the fibre cell walls from one ovule reached a maximum value at the end of the elongation growth, decreased, and then reached a second maximum at the end of the secondary wall deposition. The absolute amounts of fucose, galactose, mannose, rhamnose, arabinose, uronic acid, and non-cellulosic glucose residues all reached a maximum at the end of the primary wall formation or at the beginning of the secondary wall formation. Only the absolute amounts of xylose and of the cellulosic glucose residues increased until the end of the fibre development. Most conspicuous was the decrease in the absolute amounts of non-cellulosic glucose and of arabinose residues during the secondary wall formation, possibly indicating a turnover of at least some of the hemicellulosic wall material.Abbreviations DPA days post anthesis - TLC thin layer chromatography - SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate  相似文献   

9.
The degradation of cell walls isolated from stems and leaves of perennial ryegrass by the anaerobic fungus Neocallimastix sp. strain CS3b was studied in a defined medium. The combined cellulose and hemicellulose fraction represented 53.1 (wt/wt) and 63.3% (wt/wt) of the dry weight of control grass leaf and stem cell walls, respectively. In both leaf and stem cell walls, glucose was the major neutral monosaccharide, followed by xylose, arabinose, and galactose. After 2 days of fermentation with Neocallimastix sp. strain CS3b, treated cell walls contained smaller amounts of neutral sugars compared with those of undigested cell walls. These results were more evident for glucose, xylose, and arabinose than for galactose. Furthermore, the sugar content of leaf cell walls decreased before a decline in the sugar content of stem cell walls was observed. Data from formate and hydrogen production indicated that the growth of Neocallimastix sp. strain CS3b was completed in 4 days in the culture system used. During this period, the fungus liberated about 95% of the fermentable sugars in untreated material. On a percentage basis, no significant differences were found in final extent of degradation of glucose, xylose, and arabinose. Galactose, however, was degraded to a lesser extent.  相似文献   

10.
Changes in cell wall constituents during the cell cycle were investigated using a synchronous culture of Catharanthus roseus (L.) G. Don which was obtained by the double phosphate starvation method (S. Amino et al. 1983. Physiol. Plant. 59: 393–396). Cell walls isolated from the cells in each phase of the cell cycle were fractionated into EDTA-soluble (pectin), 5 and 24% KOH-soluble (hemicellulose) and 24% KOH-insoluble (cellulose) fractions. Their sugar compositions were investigated by gas chromatography and methylation analysis. The following changes were observed: (1) a significant increase in total cell walls in the G1 phase after cell division, (2) a temporary increase in the relative amount of the EDTA-soluble fraction during cytokinesis, (3) an increase in the relative amount of galactose, probably 4-linked galactose, in the EDTA-soluble fraction prior to cytokinesis, (4) a temporary increase in the relative amount of 3-linked glucose during cytokinesis, (5) little change in the composition of polysaccharides throughout the cell cycle in the 24% KOH-soluble fraction, which consisted mainly of xyloglucan. The changes observed are discussed in relation to the progression and physiological significance of each phase of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

11.
Roberts RM  Loewus F 《Plant physiology》1966,41(9):1489-1498
Prolonged growth of cell cultures of sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus L.) on agar medium containing myo-inositol-2-(3)H resulted in incorporation of label predominately into uronosyl and pentosyl units of cell wall polysaccharides. Procedures normally used to distinguish between pectic substance and hemicellulose yielded carbohydrate-rich fractions with solubility characteristics ranging from pectic substance to hemicellulose yet the uronic acid and pentose composition of these fractions was decidedly pectic. Galacturonic acid was the only uronic acid present in each fraction. Subfractionation of alkali-soluble (hemicellulosic) polysaccharide by neutralization followed by ethanol precipitation gave 3 fractions, a water-insoluble, an ethanol-insoluble, and an ethanol-soluble fraction, each progressively poorer in galacturonic acid units and progressively richer in arabinose units; all relatively poor in xylose units.Apparently, processes involved in biosynthesis of primary cell wall continued to produce pectic substance during cell enlargement while processes leading to biosynthesis of typically secondary cell wall polysaccharide such as 4-0-methyl glucuronoxylan were not activated.  相似文献   

12.
Cell walls from cotyledons of smooth field pea, broad bean and soya bean contain ca 55% pectic polysaccharides associated with 9% cellulose. Arabinose is the major pectic sugar of pea and broad bean walls whereas soya bean pectic polymers are constituted of galactose and arabinose in the ratio (2:1). Galacturonic acid represents ca 20% of the walls. In addition, pea and broad bean cell walls contain, respectively, 12% and 6% of non-starchy and non-cellulosic glucans bearing 4,6-linked and 3-linked glycosyl units. EDTA-soluble acidic pectic substances are distinct rhamnogalacturonans bearing decreasing proportions of interrupting rhamnose from highly interrupted moieties to nearly homogenous homogalacturonans. Pea and broad bean rhamnogalacturonans are associated with arabinose-containing polymers of average DP ca 30–35 whereas soya bean ones have side chains of arabinose and galactose of DP ca 40.  相似文献   

13.
Galactanase from Phytophthora infestans and an arabinosidase isoenzyme from Sclerotinia fructigena attacked the cortical cell walls of apple fruits liberating galactose and arabinose residues, respectively. Other arabinosidase isoenzymes from S. fructigena attacked cell walls very slowly. A S. fructigena polygalacturonase isoenzyme liberated half of the uronic acid residues with few associated neutral residues, while a second polygalacturonase isoenzyme released more uronic acid with a substantial proportion of arabinose and galactose and lesser amounts of xylose, rhamnose and glucose; reaction products of this enzyme could be further degraded by the first isoenzyme to give high MW fragments, rich in arabinose with most of the xylose, rhamnose and glucose, and low MW fragments rich in galactose and uronic acid. Endoglucanase from Trichoderma viride released a small proportion of the glucose residues from cell walls together with uronic acid, arabinose, xylose and galactose; more extensive degradation occurred if walls were pre-treated with the second polygalacturonase isoenzyme. Endoglucanase reaction products were separated into a high MW fraction, rich in arabinose, and lower MW fractions rich in galactose and glucose residues. The high MW polygalacturonase and endoglucanase products could be degraded with an arabinosidase isoenzyme to release about 75% of their arabinose. Cell walls from ripe fruit showed similar susceptibility to arabinosidase and galactanase to those from unripe apples. Cell walls from fruit, ripened detached from the tree were more susceptible to degradation by polygalacturonase than walls from unripe fruit or fruit ripened on the tree. Endoglucanase released less carbohydrate from ripe fruit cell walls than from unripe fruit cell walls.  相似文献   

14.
A suspension culture of Mentha was established from callus which formed on the tips of young shoots of a Mentha hybrid (M. arvenis × M. spicata). Changes in growth parameters during a culture cycle were recorded. The general appearance of cells during division and growth, including the changes in cell form, was also represented.Suspension-cultured cells of Mentha hybrid released a large amount of extracellular polysaccharides (ECP) mainly at the logarithmic phase of the growth cycle. The ECP contained galacturonic acid as major components and arabinose, galactose, glucose, xylose, rhamnose and mannose as minor components. The ratio of the uronic acid content to total sugar content in the ECP was below 40% at day 7, but increased up to 90% at day 21. The relative contents of xylose and glucose in the ECP decreased during the culture period, while the arabinose content increased and those of rhamnose, mannose and galactose remained constant.The IR spectrum suggested that the ECP were low-methoxylated pectic polysaccharides. The presence of lignin and related compounds in the ECP was not detected. The protein content of the ECP was about 10% and the main amino acids were alanine, proline, hydroxyproline, valine, asparticacid and serine, in that order.  相似文献   

15.
The cell walls obtained from cultured cells grown under variousconditions and their mother plant tissues or organs were comparedwith regard to the neutral sugar composition of polysaccharides.In the pectic fraction of cell walls from soybean hypocotyl,greater amounts of galactose than other neutral sugars weredetected, and the relative sugar ratio did not change in theelongating and non-elongating portions of the tissue. On theother hand, more arabinose than other sugars was detected inthe pectic fraction of cell walls from cultured cells from soybeanhypocotyl tissue, and no significant change in the sugar ratioof polysaccharides was found in this fraction during the cultureperiod. A higher arabinose content in cell walls from culturedcells from root tissues as compared to the mother tissues ororgans was also detected in carrot. The neutral sugar ratioof cell walls from cultured cells was similar in cells grownon agar or liquid medium, with indoleacetic acid, or with orwithout 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D). These factssuggest that the high arabinose content of cell walls is notcommon to the cell walls of young, growing, undifferentiatedcells, and that 2,4-D is not required for the maintenance ofthe higher content of arabinose in cell walls of cultured cells. 1A preliminary report of this work was presented for the annualmeeting of the American Society of Plant Physiologist at OhioState University, August, 1979. [Plant Physiol., 63(5) 118 (1979)]. 4Department of Agricultural Chemistry, Washington State University,Pullman, Washington 99164, U.S.A. (Received October 6, 1979; )  相似文献   

16.
Cell elongation occurred when carrot (Daucus carota L. ev. Kurodagosun) cells subcultured through sieving (Y. Ozeki and A. Komamine, Physiol. Plant. 53: 570-577. 1981) were transferred to a medium lacking auxin, while the cells showed no elongation in a medium containing 2, 4-D. Changes in polysaccharides of the cell walls and in their sugar composition during elongation were investigated. All wall components, EDTA-soluble pectic substance, 5 and 24%, KOH-soluble hemicelluloses and cellulose increased markedly during elongation. The increase of hemicelluloses correlated especially with elongation. In the 5% KOH-soluble hemicellulose, galactose and arabinose contents in the walls increased significantly both in amounts (per fresh weight) and relative contents (% in total neutral sugars) during elongation, while the relative contents of glucose and xylose decreased rapidly in the 5 and 24% KOH-soluble hemicelluloses. The methylation analysis tentatively indicated that larger amounts of galactan and/or arabinogalactan and lower amount of xyloglucan were found as components of the two hemicelluloses of elongating cells than those of non-elongating cells. The amounts of total carbohydrate and of uronic acid of extracellular polysaccharides secreted into the medium increased to a larger extent in the elongation culture than in the non-elongation culture. The contents of galactose and arabinose in extracellular polysaccharides increased rapidly in the elongation culture. The biochemical aspects of cell elongation in the absence of auxin were discussed from the viewpoint of the results obtained here.  相似文献   

17.
Changes in the composition of cell walls and extracellular polysaccharides (ECP) were studied during the growth of suspension-cultured Populus alba cells. Three growth phases, namely the cell division phase, cell elongation phase and stationary phase, were distinguished. The active deposition of polysaccharides in cell wall fractions (50 m M Na2CO3-, 1 M KOH-, 4 M KOH-soluble and 4 M KOH-insoluble) was observed during the elongation phase. A 50 m M Na2CO3-soluble pectic fraction mainly composed of 1,4-linked galactan and arabinan except acidic sugars. The 1,4-linked galactan decreased markedly during elongation. In 1 and 4 M KOH-soluble hemicellulosic fractions, non-cellulosic 1,4-glucan and xyloglucan were observed as major components, respectively. These polysaccharides also decreased during elongation. A large amount of polysaccharides was secreted into the medium as ECP. Neutral sugars were detected predominantly by sugar composition analysis. Acidic sugars, such as galacturonic acid, were less than 12% of total. In this study, active metabolism of pectic polysaccharides in addition to hemicellulosic polysaccharides, especially neutral side chains of pectin, during cell growth, was clarified.  相似文献   

18.
White spruce [ Picea glauca (Moench) Voss] seedlings were preconditioned by subjecting them to 3 cycles of a mild drought stress. After 1 week of stress relief their water status, soluble carbohydrate content and cell wall composition in newly formed needles were examined and compared with those in control seedlings. Both preconditioned and control seedlings were subsequently subjected to a severe drought stress and again analyzed. Preconditioning treatment both before and during subsequent stress exposure lowered osmotic potentials at full hydration, and after the loss of turgor, decreased lignin content and increased hemicellulose content of the cell walls. Severe drought had similar but more drastic effects on seedling water relations, sugar accumulation and cell wall hemicellulose content; it also decreased cell wall pectin levels. The decrease in pectin levels was accompanied by a loss of galactose and glucose from pectic substances. Little change in cellulose content was observed as a result of preconditioning and severe drought.  相似文献   

19.
The polysaccharide structure of potato cell walls: Chemical fractionation   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Cell walls of potato tubers were fractionated by successive extraction with various reagents. A slightly degraded pectic fraction with 77% galacturonic acid was extracted in hot, oxalate-citrate buffer at pH 4. A further, major pectic fraction with 38% galacturonic acid was extracted in cold 0.1 M Na2CO3 with little apparent degradation. These two pectic fractions together made up 52% of the cell wall. Most of the oxalate-citrate fraction could alternatively be extracted with cold acetate-N,N,N-tetracetic acid (CDTA) buffer, a non-degradative extractant which nevertheless removed essentially all the calcium ions. This fraction was therefore probably held only by calcium binding, and the remainder of the pectins by covalent bonds. Electrophoresis showed that both pectic fractions contained a range of molecular types differing in composition, with a high arabinose: galactose ratio as well as much galacturonic acid in the most extractable fractions. From methylation data, the main side-chains were 1,4-linked galactans and 1,5-linked arabinans, with smaller quantities of covalently attached xyloglucan. Extraction with NaOH-borate removed a small hemicellulose fraction and some cellulose. The main hemicelluloses were apparently a galactoxyloglucan, a mannan or glucomannan and an arabinogalactan.Abbreviations GLC gas-liquid chromatography - MS mass spectrometry - V0 void volume - MW weight-average molecular weight - DMSO dimethylsulphoxide - EDTA ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid - TFA trifluoroacetic acid - CDTA N,N,N-tetraacetic acid  相似文献   

20.
A fractionation of non-cellulosic sugars of Oryza sativa L. coleoptile cell walls was carried out and the composition of each fraction was studied during coleoptile growth.Percentages of fractions extracted with boiling water and with oxalate (pectic substances) were almost constant throughout development. An increase in the K II hemicellulosic fraction (extracted with 24% KOH) content, and a decrease in the K I hemicellulosic fraction (extracted with 10% KOH) were detected, when coleoptile growth finished.The percentage of glucose content in the K I hemicellulosic fraction was highest in young coleoptiles and lowest in old ones. Furthermore, a highly significant linear relationship between amounts of glucose and growth rate was obtained, while a inverse relationship between the amount of xylose and arabinose and growth rate was attained.Abreviations GLC gas liquid chromatography - IAA indole-3-acetic-acid - TFA trifluoroacetic acid - To minimum stress-relaxation time  相似文献   

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