首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
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   

2.
The timing of mobilisation of lipid, sucrose, raffinose and phytate in lettuce seeds (achenes) (cv. Grand Rapids) has been examined. These reserves (33%, 1.5%, 0.7%, 1.4% of achene dry weight, respectively) are stored mostly in the cotyledons. Except for a slight degradation of raffinose and increase in sucrose, there is no detectable reserve mobilisation during germination. The endosperm (8% of seed dry weight), which has thick, mannan-containing cell walls (carbohydrate, 3,4% of seed dry weight), is completely degraded within about 15h following germination. Mannanase activity increases about 100-fold during the same period and arises in all regions of the endosperm. Also during this period sucrose and raffinose are degraded and fructose and glucose accumulate in the embryo. The endosperm hydrolysis products are taken up by the embryo, and are probably used as an additional reserve to support early seedling growth. However, endosperm cell-wall carbohydrates, such as mannose, are not found as free sugars. Lipid and phytate are degraded in a later, second phase of mobilisation. Low levels of sucrose are present in the embryo, mostly in the cotyledons, and large amounts of fractose and glucose (14% of seedling dry weight at 3 days after sowing) accumulate in the hypocotyl and radicle. It is suggested that sucrose, produced in the cotyledons by gluco-neogenesis, is translocated to the axis and converted there to fructose and glucose.  相似文献   

3.
Extraction of sunflower heads with ammonium oxalate afforded water-soluble pectin material and water-insoluble glycoprotein material, the carbohydrate portion of which consisted of galacturonic acid and xylose residues; the pectin material defied fractionation with cetylpyridinium chloride. Extraction with hydrochloric acid (pH 1.5) afforded water-soluble and water-insoluble polysaccharide materials. The former, when fractionated with cetylpyridinium chloride, gave a glycoprotein, the carbohydrate moiety of which was composed of galacturonic acid, galactose (major), glucose, arabinose, and xylose, and also a rhamnan. The latter was a glycoprotein, the carbohydrate portion of which consisted of galactose (major), glucose, xylose, and rhamnose residues. Extraction of the sunflower heads with water also gave glycoprotein material, which was fractionated by paper electrophoresis into a glyco-protein, the carbohydrate moiety ofwhich was composed of galacturonic acid (minor), galactose, glucose, xylose, arabinose, and rhamnose (major) residues, and a heteropolysaccharide composed of galactose (major), glucose, xylose, and arabinose residues.  相似文献   

4.
myo-[2-3H]Inositol was fed to bean seeds by imbibition and itsmetabolic fate was studied during germination and seedling growth.The largest amount of myo-inositol was taken up from a 500 HIMsupply (8 mg/seed) and the highest percentage was from 1 HIM(29%). myo-Inositol was incorporated to new cell wall polysaccharidesof hypocotyl and roots, mostly as uronic acid and pentose residues.In the 80% ethanolinsoluble cell walls of hypocotyls at 3, 4and 5 days after imbibition, 47 to 52% of 3H was detected asuronic acids, 20 to 24% as arabinose and 11 to 19% as xylose.Glucogenesis from myo-inositol was low: less than 6% was recoveredas hexoses. The 3H in uronic acid and arabinose residues decreasedwith increasing age (i.e. 0 to 6 cm from cotyledons) and increasedin older segments (further than 6 cm from cotyledons). In theoldest segment of 5-day-old hypocotyl (> 10 cm), 3H in thesugar residues was more than that in the youngest part (0–2cm). On the other hand, 3H in xylose residues increased steadilyin the older part, but did not exceed that in arabinose. The results show that the myo-inositol oxidation pathway functionsin growing hypocotyls and roots of bean seedlings to provideexclusively uronic acid and pentose units for cell wall synthesis.Results also show that incorporation of arabinose and uronicacids derived from myo-[2-3H]inositol to cell wall polysaccharidesis active in two regions of the hypocotyl; first, for the constructionof the primary walls in the young, growing region of the hypocotyl,and second, for thickening of the walls after completion ofelongation growth. 1Supported by NSERC of Canada. (Received April 10, 1984; Accepted June 12, 1984)  相似文献   

5.
Cell walls prepared from the endosperm tissue of hydrated lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) seeds undergo autohydrolysis. Release of carbohydrates is most rapid (0.4-0.6 [mu]g per endosperm) within the 1st h of incubation in buffer, but substantial autolysis is sustained for at least 10 h. Autolysis is temperature sensitive, and the optimum rate occurs at pH 5. The rate of autolysis increases markedly in the period just prior to radicle emergence. The cell-wall polysaccharide composition in micropylar and lateral endosperm regions differs significantly; the micropylar walls are rich in arabinose and glucose with substantially lower amounts of mannose. Although walls prepared from both micropylar and lateral regions undergo autolysis, micropylar walls release carbohydrates at a higher rate than lateral walls. Autolysis products elute as large polymers when subjected to size-exclusion chromatography, suggesting that endo-enzyme activity is responsible for release of fragments containing arabinose, galactose, mannose, and uronic acids. Arabinose, galactose, mannose, and glucose are also released as monomers. As a function of time, the ratio of polymers to monomers decreases, indicating that exo-enzyme activity is also present. Thermoinhibition or treatment with abscisic acid suppresses germination and reduces the rates of autolysis of walls isolated from the endosperm by about 25%. Treatments that alleviate thermoinhibition (kinetin and gibberellic acid) increase the rates of autolysis by 20 to 30% when compared to thermoinhibited controls.  相似文献   

6.
Cell wall isolation procedures were evaluated to determine their effect on the total pectin content and the degree of methylesterification of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L.) fruit cell walls. Water homogenates liberate substantial amounts of buffer soluble uronic acid, 5.2 milligrams uronic acid/100 milligrams wall. Solubilization appears to be a consequence of autohydrolysis mediated by polygalacturonase II, isoenzymes A and B, since the uronic acid release from the wall residue can be suppressed by homogenization in the presence of 50% ethanol followed by heating. The extent of methylesterification in heat-inactivated cell walls, 94 mole%, was significantly greater than with water homogenates, 56 mole%. The results suggest that autohydrolysis, mediated by cell wall-associated enzymes, accounts for the solubilization of tomato fruit pectin in vitro. Endogenous enzymes also account for a decrease in the methylesterification during the cell wall preparation. The heat-inactivated cell wall preparation was superior to the other methods studied since it reduces β-elimination during heating and inactivates constitutive enzymes that may modify pectin structure. This heat-inactivated cell wall preparation was used in subsequent enzymatic analysis of the pectin structure. Purified tomato fruit polygalacturonase and partially purified pectinmethylesterase were used to assess changes in constitutive substrates during tomato fruit ripening. Polygalacturonase treatment of heat-inactivated cell walls from mature green and breaker stages released 14% of the uronic acid. The extent of the release of polyuronides by polygalacturonase was fruit development stage dependent. At the turning stage, 21% of the pectin fraction was released, a value which increased to a maximum of 28% of the uronides at the red ripe stage. Pretreatment of the walls with purified tomato pectinesterase rendered walls from all ripening stages equally susceptible to polygalacturonase. Quantitatively, the release of uronides by polygalacturonase from all pectinesterase treated cell walls was equivalent to polygalacturonase treatment of walls at the ripe stage. Uronide polymers released by polygalacturonase contain galacturonic acid, rhamnose, galactose, arabinose, xylose, and glucose. As a function of development, an increase in the release of galacturonic acid and rhamnose was observed (40 and 6% of these polymers at the mature green stage to 54 and 15% at the red ripe stage, respectively). The amount of galactose and arabinose released by exogenous polygalacturonase decreased during development (41 and 11% from walls of mature green fruit to 11 and 6% at the red ripe stage, respectively). Minor amounts of glucose and xylose released from the wall by exogenous polygalacturonase (4-7%) remained constant throughout fruit development.  相似文献   

7.
Mature fruit of Chorisia speciosa yield an exudate (E-I) following mechanical injury. The polysaccharide contains rhamnose, arabinose, xylose, mannose, glucose, galactose and glucuronic acid in molar ratios of 20:11:1:3:2:40:23. The main chain of the structure is composed by beta-galactopyranosyl units linked (1 --> 3) and (1 --> 6) as indicated by NMR spectra and methylation data. Arabinosef and rhamnose are terminal residues. In order to compare E-I with the polysaccharides from the fruit mesocarp, the latter was submitted to different extractions. The water fraction contains rhamnose, arabinose, xylose, mannose, glucose, galactose and uronic acid in molar ratios of 18:4:1:2:3:44:28. It was treated with CTAB yielding a precipitate which was decomplexed with NaCl, giving four fractions. The fraction obtained using 0.15 M NaCl had a quantitative composition similar that of E-I.  相似文献   

8.
A relatively high concentration of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (45 μ M ) in solid culture medium stimulated the formation and secretion of mucilage polysaccharides by callus tissues of Arabidopsis thaliana L. Heynh. (line Estland). The mucilage was composed of at least two polysaccharides as revealed by gel chromatography on Sepharose 4B: the major component (87%) eluted in the void volume (molecular weight 2 × 106 or greater) and the minor component (13%) eluted in the molecular weight range from 2 × 104 to 4 × 105. Both polysaccharide components contained small amounts of uronic acids. The major polysaccharide consisted mostly of galactose (49%), arabinose (28%) and fucose (10%), whereas the minor one consisted of galactose (44%), xylose (18%), arabinose (14%) and rhamnose (14%). One of the components of the secreted mucilage seems to be an arabinogalactan.  相似文献   

9.
Degradation of Cell Wall Polysaccharides during Tomato Fruit Ripening   总被引:26,自引:17,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Changes in neutral sugar, uronic acid, and protein content of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill) cell walls during ripening were characterized. The only components to decline in amount were galactose, arabinose, and galacturonic acid. Isolated cell walls of ripening fruit contained a water-soluble polyuronide, possibly a product of in vivo polygalacturonase action. This polyuronide and the one obtained by incubating walls from mature green fruit with tomato polygalacturonase contained relatively much less neutral sugar than did intact cell walls. The ripening-related decline in galactose and arabinose content appeared to be separate from polyuronide solubilization. In the rin mutant, the postharvest loss of these neutral sugars occurred in the absence of polygalacturonase and polyuronide solubilization. The enzyme(s) responsible for the removal of galactose and arabinose was not identified; a tomato cell wall polysaccharide containing galactose and arabinose (6:1) was not hydrolyzed by tomato β-galactosidase.  相似文献   

10.
In germinating lupin cotyledons, there was a rapid depletion of raffinose series oligosaccharides, a temporary increase in sucrose and constant low levels of reducing monosaccharides. The major polysaccharide fraction was extracted with hot NH4 oxalate—EDTA solution and had the constitution of intercellular/cell wall polysaccharide. GLC examination of component sugars showed that as cotyledons expanded this fraction was depleted and that there was selective hydrolysis of arabinose and galactose, so that the uronic acid proportion increased. Gel and DEAE-cellulose chromatography showed that this fraction became more heterogeneous. The neutral and acidic fractions were separated and the component sugars, viscosities, gel chromatographic behaviour and sedimentation constants of these determined. The results indicated that in the later phase of plant cell wall expansion in germinating lupin cotyledons the arabinogalactan side chains of the pectic polysaccharide fraction are selectively hydrolysed leaving a primary wall with a high uronic acid content.  相似文献   

11.
An extracellular polysaccharide producing bacterium Zoogloea sp. was isolated from an agro-industrial environment in the north-eastern region of Brazil. The extracellular polysaccharide produced from sugarcane molasses was hydrolysed with trifluoroacetic acid (mild and strong conditions) giving 88% of soluble material. The main monosaccharides present in the soluble fraction were glucose (87.6%), xylose (8.6%), mannose (0.8%), ribose (1.7%), galactose (0.1%), arabinose (0.4%) and glucuronic acid (0.8%). Methylation analysis of the polysaccharide showed mainly 2,3,6-tri-O-methylhexitol (74.7%) and 2,3,-di-O-methylhexitol (17.7%). Enzyme hydrolysis of the polysaccharide with a cellulase confirmed the presence of (1→4)-β- -glucopyranosyl residues.  相似文献   

12.
1. The patterns of incorporation of radioactivity from d-[6-(3)H]-, d-[1-(14)C]-, d-[U-(14)C]- and d-[6-(14)C]-glucose and [U-(14)C]myoinositol into the neutral sugars and uronic acids of the polysaccharides synthesized in different regions of the root-tip of maize were determined. 2. The root-cap tissue synthesized a slime in which a polysaccharide that contained a high proportion of fucose (32%) and galactose (21%) was found. This polysaccharide is synthesized only by the root-cap cells, and very little polysaccharide containing fucose is synthesized in adjacent tissues. Part of the meristematic tissue of the root is surrounded by the cap cells. A section of the root that contains both these tissues can be analysed, and the polysaccharide synthesized by the meristematic region can be obtained since the contribution of the root-cap cells can be found by the amount of fucose formed. 3. It was shown that there is very little difference in the polysaccharide synthesis of the meristematic region from that of the cells immediately behind it. In the more mature cells, however, the amount of xylose synthesized relative to that of arabinose is increased, and the proportion of xylose and arabinose formed in the matrix polysaccharides is increased whereas that of galactose is decreased. 4. The effect of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) on polysaccharide synthesis was to bring about a decrease in the relative amount of galactose synthesized in the matrix polysaccharides of cells immediately adjacent to the meristematic region and also in the more mature tissue. The growth factor also increased the amount of xylose synthesized relative to that of arabinose in the more mature tissue. These metabolic effects were related to a very obvious change in the morphological appearance of the root-tips. 5. Radioactivity from [U-(14)C]myoinositol was incorporated mainly into xylose, arabinose and galacturonic acid rather than into the hexoses, although small amounts of these sugars were formed.  相似文献   

13.
Carbohydrate composition was determined in isolated cell walls of meiospores of Allomyces arbuscula after incubation for 15 min (encysted meiospores: cysts), 150 min (germlings: cysts + rhizoids) and 24 h (cysts + rhizoids + hyphae). The principal constituent in all cell wall samples is chitin, accounting for about 75% of the recovered carbohydrates. In addition, cell walls of all stages examined contain polysaccharides which release galactose, glucose, mannose, arabinose, xylose, fucose, and rhamnose on acid hydrolysis. While different developmental stages show minor quantitative changes in chitin, the ratio of galactose to glucose decreases sharply during differentiation of ungerminated cysts into germlings with rhizoids and hyphae. The increase in glucose is accompanied by a decrease in the amount of xylose and/or fucose and of galactose.List of Abbreviation TFA trifluoroacetic acid  相似文献   

14.
Ohdaira Y  Kakegawa K  Amino S  Sugiyama M  Fukuda H 《Planta》2002,215(2):177-184
Cell walls were prepared from cultured mesophyll cells of Zinnia elegans L. that were transdifferentiating into tracheary elements and incubated in a buffer to undergo autolysis. The rate of autolysis of cell walls was determined by measuring the amount of carbohydrate released from the cell walls into the buffer during incubation. During the course of culture of mesophyll cells, the autolysis rate increased markedly at the time when thickenings of secondary cell walls characteristic of tracheary elements became visible (after 48-72 h of culture), and thereafter the rate remained at a high level. Comparative studies on the autolysis rate of cell walls using various control cultures, in which tracheary element differentiation did not take place, revealed a close relationship between the autolysis rate around the 60th hour of culture and differentiation. Sugar analysis by colorimetric assays and gas chromatography of carbohydrates released from the cell walls detected uronic acid, arabinose, galactose, glucose, xylose, rhamnose, fucose, and mannose. Among these sugars, uronic acid was the most abundant, and accounted for approximately half of the total released sugars. The decrease of acidic polysaccharides in the primary cell walls during tracheary element differentiation was visualized by staining cultured cells with alcian blue at pH 2.5. These results suggest that active degradation of components of primary cell walls, including pectin, is integrated into the program of tracheary element differentiation.  相似文献   

15.
The composition of walls isolated from pollen grains of the seagrass Amphibolis antarctica was determined. Glucose, galactose, and rhamnose were the major neutral monosaccharides in the wall polysaccharides, and fucose, arabinose, xylose, and mannose were present in minor proportions. No apiose, a monosaccharide present in the wall polysaccharides of the vegetative parts of the seagrass Heterozostera tasmanica, was found. Large amounts of uronic acid (mainly as galacturonic acid) were found in the walls. The monosaccharides were probably present in cellulose and pectic polysaccharides, the latter comprising neutral pectic galactans, and rhamnogalacturonans containing high proportions of rhamnose. The walls contained a small amount of protein; glycine and lysine were the amino acids present in the highest proportions. Histochemical examination of isolated walls confirmed the presence of polyanionic components (pectic polysaccharides), -glucans (cellulose), and protein. The composition of the walls is discussed in relation to analyses of the walls of pollen grains and vegetative organs of other plants.  相似文献   

16.
The gum exudate from Combretum hartmannianum is water-soluble, forms very viscous solutions, and contains galactose (22%), arabinose (43%), mannose (10%), xylose (6%), rhamnose (4%), glucuronic acid (6%), 4-O-methylglucuronic acid (2%), and galacturonic acid (7%). The acidic components produced on hydrolysis of the gum were 6-O-(β-D-glucopyranosyluronic acid)-D-galactose, and two saccharides that had the same chromatographic mobility, and contained mannose and galacturonic acid, and galactose and 4-O-methylglucuronic acid, respectively. Methylation and methanolysis of the gum indicated the presence of terminal uronic acid, rhamnose, xylose, galactose, arabinofuranose, and arabinopyranose. Controlled, acid hydrolysis indicated the presence of (1→3)-linked arabinopyranose side-chains and (1→6)-linked galactose residues. C. hartmannianum gum, when subjected to two Smith-degradations, yielded Polysaccharides I and II, both of which contained galactose, arabinose, and mannose. Insufficient crude gum was available for a complete structural study, but the molecule was shown to contain long, sparsely branched chains of (1→6)-linked galactose residues, to which are attached (1→3)-linked arabinose and (1→3)-linked mannose side-chains.  相似文献   

17.
Hot water extraction of a Phormidium species from Antarctica and of a sample of Phormïdium foveolarum which had been cultured axenically led to the isolation of a water-soluble polysaccharide from both materials. Acidic hydrolysis of each gave a similar pattern of monosaccharides comprising arabinose, xylose, rhamnose, fucose, galactose, mannose and glucose, and both contained uronic acid. All attempts by a variety of methods to fractionate the Antarctic polysaccharide into more than a single entity were unsuccessful. Periodate oxidation, partial hydrolysis and methylation studies on this polysaccharide supported a highly branched molecule with 1,3-linked glucose and 1,4-linked galactose as dominant features.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Kestutis J. Tautvydas 《Planta》1978,140(3):213-220
Mucilage and colony walls of E. californica were separated from the cells by homogenization, filtration, and differential centrifugation. The chief components of the mucilage were a high-molecular-weight (MW) hydroxyproline-rich glycoprotein and a very high-MW polysaccharide in the proportions 47% and 34%, respectively. The glycoprotein consisted of galactose, arabinose, xylose and an unidentified neutral sugar; and the amino acids cysteine, aspartic acid, glutamic acid, arginine, lysine, glycine, serine, methionine, histidine, alanine, proline, hydroxyproline, tyrosine, threonine, valine, phenylalanine, isoleucine and leucine. The principal sugar of the polysaccharide was mannose. The chemical composition of the colony walls was essentially the same as that of the glycoprotein in the mucilage except that there was almost twice as much hydroxyproline. Also the protein content of the colony walls was 34% while that of the glycoprotein in the mucilage was 22%. No glucose, sugar acids or nucleic acids were found in the extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

20.
The cold-water extract from the skin of Opuntia ficus-indica fruits was fractionated by anion-exchange chromatography. The major fraction, which was purified by size exclusion chromatography, consisted of a polysaccharide composed of galactose and arabinose residues in the ratio 6.3:3.3, with traces of rhamnose, xylose and glucose, but no uronic acid. The results of methylation analysis, supported by (13)C NMR spectroscopy, indicated that this polysaccharide corresponded to an arabinogalactan having a backbone of (1-->4)-linked beta-D-galactopyranosyl residues with 39.5% of these units branched at O-3. The side-groups consisted either of single L-arabinofuranosyl units or L-arabinofuranosyl alpha-(1-->5)-linked disaccharides. This polysaccharide is thus an arabinogalactan that can be classified in the type I of the arabinogalactan family.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号