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1.
Revealing the structural and functional diversity of plant cell walls   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The extensive knowledge of the chemistry of isolated cell wall polymers, and that relating to the identification and partial annotation of gene families involved in their synthesis and modification, is not yet matched by a sophisticated understanding of the occurrence of the polymers within cell walls of the diverse cell types within a growing organ. Currently, the main sets of tools that are used to determine cell-type-specific configurations of cell wall polymers and aspects of cell wall microstructures are antibodies, carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs) and microspectroscopies. As these tools are applied we see that cell wall polymers are extensively developmentally regulated and that there is a range of structurally distinct primary and secondary cell walls within organs and across species. The challenge now is to document cell wall structures in relation to diverse cell biological events and to integrate this knowledge with the emerging understanding of polymer functions.  相似文献   

2.
The synthesis and modification of the cell wall must involve the production of new cell wall polymers and enzymes. Their targeted secretion to the apoplast is one of many potential control points. Since Rab GTPases have been strongly implicated in the regulation of vesicle trafficking, a review of their involvement in cell wall metabolism should throw light on this possibility. Cell wall polymer biosynthesis occurs mainly in the Golgi apparatus, except for cellulose and callose, which are made at the plasma membrane by an enzyme complex that cycles through the endomembrane system and which may be regulated by this cycling. Several systems, including the growth of root hairs and pollen tubes, cell wall softening in fruit, and the development of root nodules, are now being dissected. In these systems, secretion of wall polymers and modifying enzymes has been documented, and Rab GTPases are highly expressed. Reverse genetic experiments have been used to interfere with these GTPases and this is revealing their importance in regulation of trafficking to the wall. The role of the RabA (or Rab11) GTPases is particularly exciting in this respect.  相似文献   

3.
Mechanical modeling and structural analysis of the primary plant cell wall   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Plant cell growth is a fundamental process during plant development whose spatial and temporal dynamics are controlled by the cell wall. Modeling mechanical aspects of cell growth therefore requires the integration of structural cell wall details with quantitative biophysical parameters. Recent advances in microscopic techniques and mechanical modeling have made significant contributions to the field of cell wall biomechanics. Live observation of cellulose microfibrils at high z-resolution now enables determining the dynamic orientation of these polymers in the different wall layers of growing cells. Mechanical modeling approaches have been developed to operate at the scale of individual molecules and will thus be able to exploit the availability of the high-resolution structural data. The combination of these techniques has the potential to make a significant and quantitative contribution to our understanding of plant growth and development.  相似文献   

4.
Mahadevan, P. R. (The Rockefeller Institute, New York, N.Y.), and E. L. Tatum. Relationship of the major constituents of the Neurospora crassa cell wall to wild-type and colonial morphology. J. Bacteriol. 90:1073-1081. 1965.-The relationship of cell wall to morphology in Neurospora crassa was studied by correlating the levels of structural polymers of the cell wall with wild-type and colonial morphology. The cell wall of N. crassa contains at least four major complexes: a peptide-polysaccharide complex; two glucose polymers, one of which was found to be a laminarinlike beta-1,3-glucan; and, lastly, chitin. The levels of one or more of these structural polymers are consistently altered in single-gene mutants with colonial growth, and in sorbose-induced colonial growth. The proportions of these polymers, particularly of the peptide-polysaccharide complex and the beta-1,3-glucan, appear to be important to morphology.  相似文献   

5.
The plant cell wall is a complex structure consisting of a variety of polymers including cellulose, xyloglucan, xylan and polygalacturonan. Biochemical and genetic analysis has made it possible to clone genes encoding cellulose synthases (CesA). A comparison of the predicted protein sequences in the Arabidopsis genome indicates that 30 divergent genes with similarity to CesAs exist. It is possible that these cellulose synthase-like (Csl) proteins do not contribute to cellulose synthesis, but rather to the synthesis of other wall polymers. A major challenge is, therefore, to assign biological function to these genes. In an effort to address this issue we have systematically identified T-DNA or transposon insertions in 17 Arabidopsis Csls. Phenotypic characterization of "knock-out" mutants includes the determination of spectroscopic profile differences in mutant cell walls from wild-type plants by Fourier-transform IR microscopy. A more precise characterization includes cell wall fractionation followed by neutral sugar composition analysis by anionic exchange chromatography.  相似文献   

6.
Many plant species have one or more types of acylation of cell wall polymers. Grasses (Poaceae family) are unique with abundant acylation of specific cell wall polymers by hydroxycinnamates. The most common hydroxycinnamates found in a wide range of grasses are ferulates (trans-4-hydroxy-3-methoxycinnamate) and p-coumarates (trans-4-hydroxycinnamate). These two hydroxycinnamates are synthesized by the phenylpropanoid pathway. Though structurally related, they seem to have different functional roles within the cell wall. Ferulates have been shown to have a critical role in cross-linking cell wall components; forming links between structural polysaccharides and links between structural polysaccharides and lignin. They are incorporated into the cell wall by distinctly different mechanisms. Ferulic acid is incorporated into cell walls as ester linked substituents on arabinoxylans. The exact role p-coumarates play in plant cell walls is unknown, but it has been shown that p-coumaric acid is ester-linked to monolignols and shuttled out to the wall to become incorporated into newly forming lignin polymers. Both processes require the activity of specific hydroxycinnamoyl transferases utilizing CoA derivatives to drive the transferase reactions.  相似文献   

7.
Cell wall types of Bacteria and Archaea The acaryote microorganisms are divided into the two domains Bacteria and Archaea. The third domain represent the Eukarya. There is no universal cell wall polymer found in all Bacteria and Archaea. Due to their morphology several cell wall types can be identified, but the chemical diversity of the individual polymers is considerably greater. Certain cell wall polymers are limited to one of the two domains of Bacteria or Archaea like the murein of the Bacteria or the pseudomurein of some methanogens. Peptidoglycans (murein, pseudomurein) do not occur in eukaryotes. On the other hand individual cell wall polymers possess similarities to polymers of other domains. The structural principle of the methanochondroitin is also implemented in the eukaryotic connective tissue. The cell wall polymers consist frequently of glycoconjugates in which the amino acid content (glycoproteins) or the glycan moiety (proteoglycan‐like polymers) predominate. Both components (carbohydrates, amino acids) can also occur in similar amounts (peptidoglycan). There exist also cell wall polymers, which consist only of glycans (slimes, methanochondroitin) or amino acids (proteins, poly‐γ‐D‐glutamyl polymers). Cell wall‐free species (Mycoplasma) also occur. The chemical composition of the cell surface polymers was one of the first phenotypic characteristics that supported the 16 sRNA concept of Carl Woese to assign acaryote organisms into the two domains Bacteria and Archaea. A common feature of all Archaea is the lack of muramic acid and an outer membrane. The later occurs in the gramnegative Bacteria. During the evolution of Bacteria and Archaea a great variety of chemically different cell wall polymers has been developed which allow the growth and interaction of Bacteria and Archaea in different habitats. In this paper, some important surface polymers of Bacteria and Archaea are presented according to their chemical composition.  相似文献   

8.
Suspension-cultured cells of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum VF 36) have been adapted to growth on high concentrations of 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile, an herbicide which inhibits cellulose biosynthesis. The mechanism of adaptation appears to rest largely on the ability of these cells to divide and expand in the virtual absence of a cellulose-xyloglucan network. Walls of adapted cells growing on 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile also differ from nonadapted cells by having reduced levels of hydroxyproline in protein, both in bound and salt-elutable form, and in having a much higher proportion of homogalacturonan and rhamnogalacturonan-like polymers. Most of these latter polymers are apparently cross-linked in the wall via phenolic-ester and/or phenolic ether linkages, and these polymers appear to represent the major load-bearing network in these unusual cell walls. The surprising finding that plant cells can survive in the virtual absence of a major load-bearing network in their primary cell walls indicates that plants possess remarkable flexibility for tolerating changes in wall composition.  相似文献   

9.
Exo- and endo-glucanases mediate specific degradation of cell wall (1,3)(1,4)-beta-D-glucans and these enzymes have been related to auxin-mediated growth and development of cereal coleoptiles. However, their distribution and functions have not been well established in other tissues. In this study the glucanase activities and cell wall autolytic activities of different maize organs were determined. Autolysis assays serve to evaluate the hydrolysis of cell wall polymers in situ by measuring the sugars released from the insoluble cell wall matrix resulting from the action of bound enzymes. Autolytic activities were observed in the cell walls of elongating young leaves, mesocotyl and roots of maize. Wall proteins extracted from all of these structures are enriched in several types of glucanases and other wall polysaccharide hydrolases. These enzymes therefore appear to have a widespread and fundamental role in wall metabolism in growing tissues.  相似文献   

10.
Cell wall extensibility controls the rate of plant cell growth. It is determined by intrinsic mechanical properties of wall polymers and by wall proteins modifying these polymers and their interactions. Heat-inactivation of endogenous cell wall proteins inhibited acid-induced extension of onion epidermis peels transverse to the net cellulose alignment in the cell wall but not parallel to it. In the former case the acid-induced extension could be controlled by expansins and in the latter case by pectins restricting shear between microfibrils. Heat-inactivated cell walls stretched transversely to the net cellulose orientation extended faster at pH 5.7 and slower at pH 4.5 compared to native walls. Expansins seem to be inactive at pH 5.7, so that faster extension may result from heat-induced viscous flow of pectins and conformational changes in the cuticle of the epidermis. This stimulation of wall extension is not seen at pH 4.5 as it is outweighed by the inhibitory effect of expansin heat-inactivation. Thus, cell wall extension in higher plants might be controlled by a complex interplay between protein-dependent and protein-independent mechanisms, the result of which depends on pH and preferential orientation of main wall polymers.  相似文献   

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