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1.
An elicitor of phytoalexin accumulation (endogenous elicitor) is solubilized from purified cell walls of soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr., cv. Wayne) by extracting the walls with hot water or by subjecting the walls to partial acid hydrolysis. The endogenous elicitor obtained from soybean cell walls binds to an anion exchange resin. The elicitor-active material released from the resin contains oligosaccharides rich in galacturonic acid; small amounts of rhamnose and xylose are also present. The preponderance of galacturonic acid in the elicitor-active fragments suggests that the elicitor is, in fact, a fragment of a pectic polysaccharide. This possibility is supported by the observation that treatment of the wall fragments with a highly purified endopolygalacturonase destroys their ability to elicit phytoalexin accumulation. This observation, together with other evidence presented in this paper, suggests that galacturonic acid is an essential constituent of the elicitor-active wall fragments. Endogenous elicitors were also solubilized by partial hydrolysis from cell walls of suspension-cultured tobacco, sycamore, and wheat cells.  相似文献   

2.
The aim of this study was to isolate protoplasts from carob (Ceratonia siliqua L.) embryonic tissues with the ability to regenerate cell walls, divide and synthesize galactomannan, a valuable polysaccharide for industry. Protoplasts isolated from carob hypocotyl hooks regenerated cell walls within 24 h. The first divisions of the regenerated cells were observed after 2 days of culture. The highest percentage that successfully divided was achieved when the seedlings were grown under diffuse light, the hypocotyl hooks were plasmolysed for 1 h before incubation in the protoplast isolation solution and the protoplasts were cultured under diffuse light. After 9 days of culture, cell clusters, consisting of eight cells, had been produced, which underwent further mitotic divisions and which were expected to lead to callus formation. Polysaccharide and oligosaccharide synthesis during protoplast regeneration was studied by radiolabelling with exogenous d ‐[U‐14C]glucose, d ‐[U‐14C]mannose or d ‐[2‐3H]mannose, which gave rise to uniform, moderately specific and highly specific labelling, respectively. As revealed by the radioactivity distribution in cell wall monosaccharides, the regenerants deposited new wall polymers that differed markedly from those being synthesized by the hypocotyls from which the protoplasts had been isolated. The regenerants deposited large amounts of callose and smaller amounts of galactose‐, arabinose‐ and mannose‐containing polymers. The latter included glucuronomannan, as demonstrated by a new method involving partial acid hydrolysis followed by β‐glucuronidase (EC 3.2.1.31) digestion. The regenerating protoplasts also released soluble extracellular carbohydrates: polysaccharides which appeared to be mainly acidic arabinogalactans, and oligosaccharides which were mainly neutral and contained glucose, galactose and mannose. We conclude that regenerating carob protoplasts are a useful system for studying carbohydrate secretion, including mannose‐rich poly‐ and oligosaccharides.  相似文献   

3.
Disruption of theSchizosaccharomyces pombe ras1 gene results in a morphological transformation to large spheres, in contrast to wild-type cells which grow as rods. Chemical analysis of isolated cell walls showed no significant changes in saccharide content but an increase in protein and phosphate contents inras1 walls relative to parent walls. Polymers tightly bound to the cell wall were solubilized by SDS treatment. Several compounds with molar mass ranging from 22 to 130 kDa and more were resolved by gel filtration and SDS-PAGE. Among low-molar-mass species, a component moving as a band at 31 kDa was conspicuous inras1 cell walls. It was solubilized by heating in Tris-HCl buffer and shown to have a β-1,3-glucanase activity against laminarin. The level of the enzyme was by 30% higher in theras1 cell wall than in the wild-type cell wall. This enzyme may participate in the remodelling of the rigid glucan network and account (at least partially) for the aberrant cell shape. Theras1 cell wall contained a high level of charged polymers, especially phosphoproteins, raising the appealing possibility thatras1 is involved in a putative kinase cascade required to sense and respond to external stimuli destined for the cell wall. Although the present study shows thatras1 loss of function and altered cell wall composition are closely linked defects, it has still to be shown that theras1 protein is directly involved in alterations found in the mutant cell walls.  相似文献   

4.
Alkaline invertase was induced during the initiation of suspension cultures of single cells from leaf explants of sugar beets in Murashige-Skoog liquid medium which contained benzyladenine. This activity was barely detectable in the leaves themselves. In suspension cultures, the presence of both acid and alkaline invertases was detected; alkaline invertase was only present in the cytoplasm of the cultured cells, whereas acid invertase was present in the cytoplasm and cell walls, and was also detected in the culture medium. The cell wall contained at least three types of acid invertase; two of these activities were solubilized by saline (saline-released) and EDTA (EDTA-released), respectively, and the third remained tightly associated with the cell wall. Saline-released and EDTA-released invertases from the cell wall showed the significant differences in their properties: the saline-released enzyme had the highest affinity for sucrose among the invertases tested, and was easily bound to cell walls, to DNA, and to a cation exchanger, unlike the EDTA-released enzyme. Sucrose is the source of carbon for plant cells in suspension culture and is probably degraded in the cell wall by the saline-released invertase, which had the highest activity and the highest affinity for sucrose. Hexose products of this degradation would be transported to cytoplasm. Soluble invertase, EDTA-released invertase from the cell wall, and one of two extracellular invertases behaved similarly upon chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. They had similar activity profiles with changing pH, and similar Km values for sucrose. Thus it appears that they are identical. Two extracellular invertases found in the growth medium of the suspension cultures were probably identical with those in the soluble fraction of callus and seedlings of sugar beets, because they showed similar behaviors during chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, and had similar activity profiles with changing pH and Km values for sucrose.  相似文献   

5.
Hori H  Elbein AD 《Plant physiology》1981,67(5):882-886
Soybean cells in suspension culture incorporate [3H]mannose into dolichyl-phosphoryl-mannose and into lipid-linked oligosaccharides as well as into extracellular and cell wall macromolecules. Tunicamycin completely inhibited the formation of lipid-linked oligosaccharides at a concentration of 5 to 10 micrograms per milliliter, but it had no effect on the formation of dolichyl-phosphoryl-mannose. Tunicamycin did inhibit the incorporation of [3H]mannose into cell wall components and extracellular macromolecules, but even at 20 micrograms per milliliter of antibiotic there was still about 30% incorporation of mannose. The radioactivity in these macromolecules was localized in mannose (70%), rhamnose (20%), galactose (8%), and fucose (2%) in the absence of antibiotic. But when tunicamycin was added, very little radioactive mannose was found in cell wall or extracellular components. The incorporation of [3H]leucine into membrane components and [14C]proline into cell wall components by these suspension cultures was unaffected by tunicamycin. However, tunicamycin did inhibit the appearance of leucine-labeled extracellular macromolecules, probably because it prevented their secretion.  相似文献   

6.
The partial purification and characterization of cell wall polysaccharides isolated from suspension-cultured Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) cells are described. Extraction of isolated cell walls with 1.0 m LiCl solubilized pectic polysaccharides with glycosyl-linkage compositions similar to those of rhamnogalacturonans I and II, pectic polysaccharides isolated from walls of suspension-cultured sycamore cells. Treatment of LiCl-extracted Douglas fir walls with an endo-α-1,4-polygalacturonase released only small, additional amounts of pectic polysaccharide, which had a glycosyl-linkage composition similar to that of rhamnogalacturonan I. Xyloglucan oligosaccharides were released from the endo-α-1,4-polygalacturonase-treated walls by treatment with an endo-β-1,4-glucanase. These oligosaccharides included hepta- and nonasaccharides similar or identical to those released from sycamore cell walls by the same enzyme, and structurally related octa- and decasaccharides similar to those isolated from various angiosperms. Finally, additional xyloglucan and small amounts of xylan were extracted from the endo-β-1,4-glucanase-treated walls by 0.5 n NaOH. The xylan resembled that extracted by NaOH from dicot cell walls in that it contained 2,4- but not 3,4-linked xylosyl residues. In this study, a total of 15% of the cell wall was isolated as pectic material, 10% as xyloglucan, and less than 1% as xylan. The noncellulosic polysaccharides accounted for 26% of the cell walls, cellulose for 23%, protein for 34%, and ash for 5%, for a total of 88% of the cell wall. The cell walls of Douglas fir were more similar to dicot (sycamore) cell walls than to those of graminaceous monocots, because they had a predominance of xyloglucan over xylan as the principle hemicellulose and because they possessed relatively large amounts of rhamnogalacturonan-like pectic polysaccharides.  相似文献   

7.
Chitinase activity was induced in cultured carrot cells by incubationwith mycelial walls of a fungus, Chaetomium globosum. Both intra-and extracellular chitinases were resolved into four componentsby gel filtration chromatography. The extracellular enzymesliberated soluble oligosaccharides of different sizes from insolublechitin, suggesting that these carrot chitinases are endo-hydrolases.The solubilized chitinase digests obtained from insoluble mycelialwalls of C. globosum and chitin were fractionated by gel filtrationchromatography, and the elicitor activity of each fraction forthe accumulation of phenolic acids in cultured carrot cellswas determined. In both solubilized fragments of fungal wallsand of chitin, elicitor-active oligosaccharides were distributedin many fractions, however, potent activity for inducing phenolicacid synthesis was observed in the high molecular weight fractions. (Received October 5, 1987; Accepted February 12, 1988)  相似文献   

8.
Populations of enriched glial precursor cells and astrocytes isolated from primary cultures of newborn rat brain were used to study the synthesis of sulfated glycoproteins. Both cell types incorporated [3H]glucosamine and [35S]sulfate into carbohydrate side chains of proteoglycans and glycoproteins. The rate of incorporation of [3H]glucosamine into the oligosaccharides and the pattern of distribution of the label into high mannose and complex glycopeptides recovered from the glycoproteins appeared to be similar for the two glial cell types. However, clear differences were noted in the rate of oligosaccharide sulfation activities. Thus the cultures of precursor glia were about four times more active than cultures enriched in astroglia in their ability to incorporate [35S]sulfate into glycoproteins.  相似文献   

9.
Polysaccharide transglycosylases catalyze disproportionation of polysaccharide molecules by cleaving glycosidic linkages in polysaccharide chains and transferring their cleaved portions to hydroxyl groups at the non-reducing ends of other polysaccharide or oligosaccharide molecules. In plant cell walls, transglycosylases have a potential to catalyze both cross-linking of polysaccharide molecules and grafting of newly arriving polysaccharide molecules into the cell wall structure during cell growth. Here we describe a polysaccharide microarray in form of a glycochip permitting simultaneous high-throughput monitoring of multiple transglycosylase activities in plant extracts. The glycochip, containing donor polysaccharides printed onto nitrocellulose-coated glass slides, was incubated with crude plant extracts, along with a series of fluorophore-labelled acceptor oligosaccharides. After removing unused labelled oligosaccharides by washing, fluorescence retained on the glycochip as a result of transglycosylase reaction was detected with a standard microarray scanner. The glycochip assay was used to detect transglycosylase activities in crude extracts from nasturtium (Tropaeolum majus) and mouse-ear cress (Arabidopsis thaliana). A number of previously unknown saccharide donor-acceptor pairs active in transglycosylation reactions that lead to the formation of homo- and hetero-glycosidic conjugates, were detected. Our data provide experimental support for the existence of diverse transglycosylase activities in crude plant extracts.  相似文献   

10.
This report describes a novel method for overexpression of 13C-labeled oligosaccharides using genetically engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells, in which a homogeneous high-mannose-type oligosaccharide accumulates because of deletions of genes encoding three enzymes involved in the processing pathway of asparagine-linked oligosaccharides in the Golgi complex. Using uniformly 13C-labeled glucose as the sole carbon source in the culture medium of these engineered yeast cells, high yields of the isotopically labeled Man8GlcNAc2 oligosaccharide could be successfully harvested from glycoprotein extracts of the cells. Furthermore, 13C labeling at selected positions of the sugar residues in the oligosaccharide could be achieved using a site-specific 13C-enriched glucose as the metabolic precursor, facilitating NMR spectral assignments. The 13C-labeling method presented provides the technical basis for NMR analyses of structures, dynamics, and interactions of larger, branched oligosaccharides.  相似文献   

11.
The distribution of heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans in clonal rat parathyroid cells is regulated by the extracellular Ca2+ concentration, which is a principal factor for parathyroid cell function (Takeuchi, Y., Sakaguchi, K., Yanagishita, M., Aurbach, G. D., and Hascall, V. C. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 13661-13668). Increasing the concentration of extracellular Ca2+ in the physiological range redistributes HS proteoglycans from the cell surface to an intracellular compartment. We have now examined effects of the extracellular Ca2+ concentration on the metabolism of the HS proteoglycans in detail using [35S]sulfate metabolic labeling-chase experiments. Two distinct metabolic pathways were demonstrated: (i) the intracellular generation of HS chains from HS proteoglycans in prelysosomal compartments followed by their release into the medium (pathway 1), and (ii) intracellular generation of HS oligosaccharides from HS chains in prelysosomal compartments, which are eventually degraded into free sulfate in lysosomes (pathway 2). The HS oligosaccharides were exclusively present within the cells, whereas HS chains were found primarily in the medium. The cells do not internalize either HS proteoglycans or HS chains from the medium. These observations indicate that these two degradation pathways are independent. In addition to these pathways, approximately 15% of the HS proteoglycans were released into the medium as a proteoglycan form. Treatment of cells with chloroquine, a lysosomotropic agent, did not affect generation of HS chains but inhibited conversion of HS chains to HS oligosaccharides or to free sulfate and resulted in the release of HS chains from the cells. The drug did not affect metabolic pathway 1. The extracellular Ca2+ concentration did not alter these intracellular degradation pathways for HS proteoglycans in the parathyroid cells. Thus, extracellular Ca2+ appears to regulate only the distribution of HS proteoglycans between the cell surface and intracellular compartments, and the process of cycling between these compartments when extracellular Ca2+ is low.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Light- and electron-microscope autoradiography using 3H-glucosamine and 3H-fucose as precursors was employed to investigate proteoglycan synthesis and secretion by late preovulatory human oocytes and cumulus cells. Both the oocyte and cumulus cells were found to be important cellular sources supplying proteoglycans to the oocytecumulus-complex extracellular matrices, i.e., the zona pellucida and the cumulus intercellular matrix. Both the oocyte and cumulus cells were shown to secrete labelled proteoglycans into the zona pellucida. Labelled proteoglycans were also detected in the cumulus intercellular matrix. Chase experiments revealed the labelled molecules to be relatively closely associated with both the zona pellucida and the cumulus interecellular matrix. Staining with chromic acid and phosphotungstic acid showed proteoglycan material to penctrate from the cumulus intercellular matrix into pores of the zona pellucida. This material is thought to be a structural equivalent of the newly synthesized proteoglycans secreted by cumulus cells and migrating into the zona pellucida (as detected by autoradiography). It is concluded that newly synthesized proteoglycans secreted by the oocyte and cumulus cells in the late preovulatory period are a component of the microenvironment in which fertilization takes place.  相似文献   

13.
The architecture of the plant cell wall is highly dynamic, being substantially re‐modeled during growth and development. Cell walls determine the size and shape of cells and contribute to the functional specialization of tissues and organs. Beyond the physiological dynamics, the wall structure undergoes changes upon biotic or abiotic stresses. In this review several cell wall traits, mainly related to pectin, one of the major matrix components, will be discussed in relation to plant development, immunity and industrial bioconversion of biomass, especially for energy production. Plant cell walls are a source of oligosaccharide fragments with a signaling function for both development and immunity. Sensing cell wall damage, sometimes through the perception of released damage‐associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), is crucial for some developmental and immunity responses. Methodological advances that are expected to deepen our knowledge of cell wall (CW) biology will also be presented.  相似文献   

14.
Mode of Attack on Orchardgrass Leaf Blades by Rumen Protozoa   总被引:4,自引:2,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Leaf blade sections of orchardgrass were incubated with rumen fluid and examined by scanning and transmission electron microscopy for the mode of attack on tissues by rumen protozoa. Rumen protozoa resembling Epidinium ecaudatum from caudatum degraded forage tissue in diluted, whole rumen fluid suspensions of microbes containing 1.6 mg of streptomycin per ml, which inhibited bacterial fiber-digesting activity. Cell walls of mesophyll, parenchyma bundle sheath, and epidermis became swollen and frayed to reveal a microfibrillar network and loss of electron density, indicating partial degradation. Then the protozoa ingested whole cells and fragments of cell walls with the aid of their cilia. Plant cells with partially degraded walls as well as chloroplasts without walls were present within the protozoa. These entodiniomorphs digested orchardgrass leaves by partially degrading the plant cell walls apparently by extracellular enzymes and then ingestion of the plant cells and cell wall fragments.  相似文献   

15.
A large pectic polysaccharide, called rhamnogalacturonan I, that is solubilized by a fungal endo-α-1,4-polygalacturonase from the purified walls of suspension-cultured sycamore cells possesses proteinase inhibitor-inducing activity similar to that of the proteinase inhibitor-inducing factor, a pectic-like oligosaccharide fraction isolated from tomato leaves. This suggests that the proteinase inhibitor-inducing activity resides in particular polysaccharide fragments which can be released when plant cell walls are exposed to appropriate enzyme degradation as a result of either wounding or pest attack.  相似文献   

16.
A bioassay to measure the incorporation of [14C]leucine into acid-precipitable polymers of suspension-cultured sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus L.) cells is described. Using this assay, cell wall fragments solubilized from sycamore cell walls by partial acid hydrolysis are shown to contain components that inhibit the incorporation of [14C]leucine into the acid-precipitable polymers. This inhibition was not attributable to a suppression of [14C]leucine uptake. The effectiveness of the wall fragments in inhibiting [14C]leucine incorporation was substantially relieved by plasmolysis of the cells. Fragments released from starch and citrus pectin are shown not to possess such inhibitory activities.  相似文献   

17.
Balb/c 3T3 cells synthesize 5–10 times more 35SO42?-labeled extracellular proteoglycan per cell than do Balb/c 3T3 cells transformed by SV40 (SV3T3). The extracellular 35SO42?-labeled proteoglycans of the Balb/c 3T3 and SV3T3 cells differ markedly in their acid mucopolysaccharide composition. Extracellular Balb/c 3T3 proteoglycans contain about 70–80% chondroitin sulfate, most of which is chondroitin 4-sulfate, and small amounts of heparan sulfate and/or heparin. On the other hand, extracellular SV3T3 proteoglycans contain 65–75% heparan sulfate and/or heparin and less than 15% chondroitin sulfate. Analysis of extracellular 35SO42?-labeled proteoglycan by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis reveals that Balb/c 3T3 alone synthesizes a class of proteoglycans capable of migrating in a 10% separating gel. This class of proteoglycans, designated as fraction C, accounts for up to 45% of the total extracellular Balb/c 3T3 35SO42?-labeled proteoglycans and contains chondroitin sulfate exclusively. It is altogether absent in the extracellular SV3T3 proteoglycans. The absence of this and other classes of chondroitin sulfate-containing proteoglycans can account for the 5–10-fold decreased synthesis of 35SO42?-labeled proteoglycans by SV3T3 cells when compared to Balb/c 3T3 cells.  相似文献   

18.
Mannan transglycosylase is a novel cell wall enzyme activity acting on mannan-based plant polysaccharides in primary cell walls of monocotyledons and dicotyledons. The enzyme activity was detected by its ability to transfer galactoglucomannan (GGM) polysaccharides to tritium-labelled GGM-derived oligosaccharides generating tritium-labelled GGM polysaccharides. Mannan transglycosylase was found in a range of plant species and tissues. High levels of the enzyme activity were present in flowers of some kiwifruit (Actinidia) species and in ripe tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) fruit. Low levels were detected in mature green tomato fruit and activity increased during tomato fruit ripening up to the red ripe stage. Essentially all activity was found in the tomato skin and outermost 2 mm of tissue. Mannan transglycosylase activity in tomato skin and outer pericarp is specific for mannan-based plant polysaccharides, including GGM, galactomannan, glucomannan and mannan. The exact structural requirements for valid acceptors remain to be defined. Nevertheless, a mannose residue at the second position of the sugar chain and the absence of a galactose substituent on the fourth residue (counting from the non-reducing end) appear to be minimal requirements. Mannan-based polysaccharides in the plant cell wall may have a role analogous to that of xyloglucans, introducing flexibility and forming growth-restraining networks with cellulose. Thus mannan transglycosylase and xyloglucan endotransglycosylase, the only other known transglycosylase activity in plant cell walls, may both be involved in remodelling and refining the cellulose framework in developmental processes throughout the life of a plant.Abbreviations EBM Endo--mannanase - GGM galactoglucomannan - GGMO Galactoglucomannan-derived oligosaccharide - G2M5 Di-galactosyl mannopentaitol - M2–M5 Mannobiitol to mannopentaitol oligosaccharides - SK+OP Skin plus outer pericarp - XET Xyloglucan endotransglucosylase - XG Xyloglucan  相似文献   

19.
Plant cell walls serve several functions: they impart rigidity to the plant, provide a physical and chemical barrier between the cell and its environment, and regulate the size and shape of each cell. Chemical studies have provided information on the biochemical composition of the plant cell walls as well as detailed knowledge of individual cell wall molecules. In contrast, very little is known about the distribution of specific cell wall components around individual cells and throughout tissues. To address this problem, we have produced polyclonal antibodies against two cell wall matrix components; rhamnogalacturonan I (RG-I), a pectic polysaccharide, and xyloglucan (XG), a hemicellulose. By using the antibiodies as specific markers we have been able to localize these polymers on thin sections of suspension-cultured sycamore cells (Acer pseudoplatanus). Our results reveal that each molecule has a unique distribution. XG is localized throughout the entire wall and middle lamella. RG-I is restricted to the middle lamella and is especially evident in the junctions between cells. These observations indicate that plant cell walls may have more distinct chemical (and functional?) domains than previously envisaged.  相似文献   

20.
The mucin glycoproteins in tracheal mucus of patients with cystic fibrosis is more highly sulfated than the corresponding secretions from healthy individuals [16]. In order to further characterize these differences in sulfation and possibly also glycosylation patterns, we compared the structures of sulfated mucin oligosaccharides synthesized by continuously cultured human tracheal cells transformed by siman virus 40. The synthesis of highly sulfated oligosaccharide chains in mucins secreted by normal human epithelial and submucosal cell lines were compared with mucins formed by cystic fibrosis tracheal epithelial and submucosal cell lines.The epithelial cell lines from cystic fibrosis trachea showed a higher rate of sulfate uptake and a significantly higher rate of synthesis and sulfation of high molecular weight chains. Mucins synthesized by each cell line in the presence of 35SO4 were isolated and oligosaccharide chains were released by beta-elimination and separated by ion exchange chromatography and gel filtration. The sulfated high molecular weight chains synthesized by the cystic fibrosis cell lines were characterized by methylation analysis and sequential glycosidase digestion before and after desulfation. Carbohydrate analysis yielded Fuc, Gal and GlcNAc in a ratio of 1:2:2.2 and only one galactosaminitol residue for about every 150-200 sugar residues present. The average molecular size of oligosaccharide chains in these fractions was between 30,000-40,000 daltons.These studies show that increased sulfation of oligosaccharides in mucins synthesized by cells from cystic fibrosis trachea is accompanied by a significant increase in the extension of a basic branched structure present in many of the lower molecular weight oligosaccharides.  相似文献   

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