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1.
Two pure, acidic polysaccharides have been isolated from the hemicellulose of slash pine in yields of 1–2% and 4–5%. Their properties are compared, and the structure of one of them has been investigated by methylation analysis. The results indicate that the glycan is a β-D-(1→4)-linked xylan chain with many branch points. 4-O-Methyl-D-glucopyranosyluronic acid, L-arabinofuranose, and D-xylopyranose residues occur as non-reducing end groups. The uronic acid occurs as single-unit attachments to the main chain. Some of the D-xylose residues in the polysaccharide are doubly branched. The total hemicellulose components of the wood probably represent a complex mixture of chemical types, from which the two pure fractions described above may be separated fortuitously by careful, fractional precipitation.  相似文献   

2.
Fruit ripening is generally attributed to disassembly of cellular wall, particularly due to solubilisation and depolymerisation of pectin and hemicellulose. Experiments were conducted to test effects of hydroxyl radicals (·OH) on the scission of cellular wall polysaccharides from pulp tissues of banana fruit at different ripening stage. Cellular wall materials were isolated from pulp tissues of banana fruit at different ripening stages. Two pectic fractions, water soluble pectin (WSP) and acid soluble pectin (ASP), and two hemicellulosic fractions, 1 M KOH soluble hemicellulose (HC1) and 4 M KOH soluble hemicellulos (HC2), were obtained from the cellular wall materials from pulp tissues, respectively. Effects of ·OH induced by the Fenton reaction on the scission of pectin and hemicellulose in vitro were investigated. As fruit ripening progressed, the sugar components of the WSP, HC1 and HC2 attacked by ·OH showed obvious molecular-mass downshifts. Thus, ·OH caused the disassembly of polysaccharides (WSP, ASP, HC1 and HC2) from cellular walls of pulp tissues of banana fruit, demonstrated by the reduced molecular mass distribution. Moreover, ·OH production in pulp tissues increased significantly as banana fruit ripened, which further help account for the role of ·OH in accelerated fruit ripening.  相似文献   

3.
Abaca fibre polysaccharides were fractionated into water soluble, pectic, 1% NaOH soluble, hemicellulosic and cellulose fractions by extraction with hot water, dilute hydrochloric acid (pH 1.6), aqueous 1% NaOH and 17.5% NaOH, respectively. Cellulose (60.4–63.6%) and hemicelluloses (20.8%) were the major polysaccharides in abaca fibres. The hot water soluble polysaccharides contained noticeable amounts of pectic substances and a large proportion of neutral polysaccharides. The pectic polysaccharide preparation was enriched in both galacturonic acid and neutral sugars, including xylose, glucose, galactose, arabinose, and rhamnose. Extraction of the fibre with aqueous 1% NaOH produced the hemicellulose–lignin complex, which was enriched in xylose and, to a lesser extent, glucose-, arabinose- and galactose-containing polysaccharides, together with 7.6% associated lignin. Further extraction of the delignified fibre residue with aqueous 17.5%. NaOH removed the hemicellulose fractions, which were strongly enriched in xylose-containing polysaccharides. Besides ferulic and p-coumaric acids, six other phenolic monomers were also detected in the mixtures of alkaline nitrobenzene oxidation of associated lignin in all the polysaccharide fractions. The content of bound lignin in water soluble, pectic, and 1% NaOH soluble polysaccharides (Fractions 1, 2, and 3), isolated directly from the lignified fibres, was 12 times that of the hemicellulosic preparations (Fractions 4 and 5) isolated from the delignified fibre residues.  相似文献   

4.
The 1 M-KOH extract from the depectinated cell walls of parenchymatous tissues of mature runner bean (Phaseolus coccineus) on neutralization, dialysis and concentration gave insoluble (hemicellulose A) and soluble (hemicellulose B) carbohydrate complexes in the weight ratio 2:1. Both fractions contained polysaccharide, protein and polyphenolic material. The structural features of the carbohydrates were examined by methylation analysis. Hemicellulose A contained mainly pectic arabinogalactan, with lesser amounts of arabinoxylan and glucan. Sequential fractionation of hemicellulose B by anion-exchange and hydroxyapatite chromatography gave a range of polysaccharide-protein-polyphenolic complexes. The main polysaccharides in these complexes were (acidic) arabinoxylans, galactans, arabinogalactans 1 and 2 and xyloglucans. The proteins contained small amounts of hydroxyproline, but were rich in aspartic acid and glutamic acid. Attempts to determine the nature of the polyphenolic material were unsuccessful. The structural features of the polysaccharide-protein-polyphenolic complexes are discussed in relation to the structure of the cell walls of parenchymatous tissues.  相似文献   

5.
《Carbohydrate research》1988,172(2):229-242
Pectic and hemicellulosic polysaccharides were successively extracted from an alcohol-insoluble residue (AIR) from carrot root by the actions of Pronase, hot dilute acid, cold dilute alkali, and concentrated alkali in yields corresponding to 12.6, 13.5, 21.7, and 6.7% of AIR, respectively. The first two products were fractionated further by ion-exchange chromatography. Carrot pectins contained 61.3–66.0% of galacturonic acid and 16.0–19.9% of neutral sugars, mainly galactose, arabinose, and rhamnose. Except for the alkali-soluble pectins, the degrees of methylation were high (62.9–67.1) and there was a significant degree of acetylation (7.2–13.5). Pectin fractions were homogeneous in gel-filtration chromatography with viscosity-average molecular weights varying between 36,200 and 56,500. Methylation analysis indicated the presence of arabinogalactans in the pectins extracted during the proteolysis, and fairly long chains of (1→4)-linked galactan with a branched arabinan in the two other pectic fractions. The hemicellulose fraction was mainly composed of (1→4)-linked glucan, (1→4)-linked mannan, (1→4)-linked xylan, and small but significant amounts of pectic polysaccharides. The possible association of cell-wall polymers is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The lipopolysaccharide of the bacterium Morganella morganii (strain KF 1676, RK 4222) yielded two polysaccharides, PS1 and PS2, when subjected to mild acid degradation followed by GPC. The polysaccharides were studied by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy, including two-dimensional COSY, TOCSY, NOESY, 1H,(13)C HMQC, and HMBC experiments. Each polysaccharide was found to contain a disaccharide repeating unit consisting of two higher sugars, 5-acetamidino-7-acetamido-3,5,7,9-tetradeoxy-L-glycero-D-galacto-non-2-ulosonic acid (a derivative of 8-epilegionaminic acid, 8eLeg5Am7Ac) and 2-acetamido-4-C-(3'-carboxamide-2',2'-dihydroxypropyl)-2,6-dideoxy-D-galactose (shewanellose, She). The two polysaccharides differ only in the ring size of shewanellose and have the following structures:Shewanellose has been previously identified in a phenol-soluble polysaccharide from Shewanella putrefaciens A6, which shows a close structural similarity to PS2.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Lorences, E. P., Suárez, L. and Zarra, I. 1987. Hypocotyl growth of Pinus pinaster seedlings. Changes in the molecular weight distribution of hemicellulosic polysaccharides.
The changes in the molecular weight distribution of water-soluble hemicelluloses and xyloglucan during hypocotyl growth of intact seedlings of Pinus pinaster Aiton were investigated. The mass-average molecular weight of total polysaccharides of the hemicellulose fraction soluble in 4% KOH dramatically increased during hypocotyl growth while xyloglucan slightly decreased. These phenomena were due to an increase in the degree of polymerization of an arabinogalactan and a slight depolymer-ization in the xyloglucan present in this fraction. In the hemicellulose fraction soluble in 24% KOH, xyloglucan increased its degree of polymerization from day 7 to 10 after which it decreased slightly. The xyloglucan of the hemicellulose fraction soluble in 4% KOH may thus be involved in cell wall loosening which makes cell wall expansion possible during hypocotyl growth.  相似文献   

9.
During extraction of hemicellulose and noncellulose polysaccharides from plant histological slices of plants the morphological integrity of the slices may be disturbed if the reagents extracting hemicellulose and noncellulose polysaccharides are rinsed away by water. Removing the reagents by delicate suction rather than removing the glass tray from the staining dish, followed by desiccation and a rinse in 95% ethanol terminates the treatment without altering the morphology of the tissues.  相似文献   

10.
  1. Changes in polysaccharide and monosaccharide components in thecell wall were studied during cell division, cell enlargmementand softening in Japanese pear fruit. Wall polysaccharides werefractionated into water soluble carbohydrate, NaClO2 solublecarbohydrate, EDTA soluble carbohydrate, acid soluble hemicellulose,alkali soluble hemicellulose and cellulose. These polysaccharideswere composed of glucose, uronic acid, xylose, arabinose, galactose,rhamnose, mannose and fucose.
  2. The total polysaccharide contentof the cell wall per cell (DNAcontent basis) remained constantduring the cell division period(S1). But during the pre-enlargementperiod (S2) it began toincrease rapidly in spite of the slightnessof cell enlargement.Thereafter, during the enlargement period(S3) the polysaccharidesremained almost constant although thefruits enlarged dramatically,and the polysaccharides increasedsomewhat with ripening. Thequality of the polysaccharides,however, seemed to change activelyat each stage. This suggestedthat the extensive fruit enlargementdid not require an increasein polysaccharide content, and wasrather accompanied by thepartial breakdown or partial interconversionof polysaccharidecomponents already present.
  3. The loss of arabinose and galactosein acid soluble hemicellulosewas prominant in fruit softeningoccurring in the ripening stage.The cellulose component decreasedwith overripening. Water solublepectin increased parallel tothe increase in total pectin withripening. On the other hand,xylose and non-cellulosic glucoseresidues did not alter withripening or overripening. Non-cellulosicglucose continued toaccumulate during cell enlargement.
1 This paper is Contribution A-88, Fruit Tree Research Station. (Received August 4, 1978; )  相似文献   

11.
An acidic O-specific polysaccharide was obtained by mild acid degradation of the Shewanella algae strain BrY lipopolysaccharide and was found to contain L-rhamnose, 2-acetamido-4-[D-3-hydroxybutyramido)]-2,4,6-trideoxy-D-glucose (D-BacNAc4NHbu), and 2-amino-2,6-dideoxy-L-galactose, N-acylated by the 4-carboxyl group of L-malic acid (L-malyl-(4-->2)-alpha-L-FucN) in the ratio 2:1:1. 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy was applied to the intact polysaccharide, and the following structure of the repeating unit was established:-3)-alpha-D-BacNAc4NHbu-(1-->3)-alpha-L-Rha-(1-->2)-alpha-L-Rha-(1-->2)-L-malyl-(4-->2)-alpha-L-FucN-(1-. The repeating unit includes linkage via the residue of malic acid, reported here for the first time as a component of bacterial polysaccharides.  相似文献   

12.
Jensen , William A. (U. California, Berkeley.) The composition of the developing primary wall in onion root tip cells. II. Cytochemical localization. Amer. Jour. Bot. 47(4) : 287—295. Illus. 1960.–The composition of the developing cell wall in the first 2 mm. of the onion root tip was studied using a cytochemical technique that permitted the detection of hemicellulose and the noncellulosic polysaccharides as well as the pectic substances and cellulose. The technique is based on the combination of a differential extraction procedure with the periodic acid-Schiff reaction for carbohydrates. The data obtained indicate that the cells of the apical initials are low in all wall substances but that all of the wall materials are present to some extent. Early in cell development, differences appear in the composition of the walls of the various tissues. The cortical cells are relatively high in the noncellulosic polysaccharides and cellulose while relatively low in the pectic substances and hemicellulose. Very early in development the protoderm is similar to the cortex, but differences develop during the radial enlargement of the cells. During this stage the walls of the protodermal cells are low in the noncellulosic polysaccharides and cellulose and high in pectic substances and hemicellulose. As elongation progresses, these differences are lost and the 2 tissues become very similar. The vascular cell walls are low in the noncellulosic polysaccharides and cellulose and are high in pectic substances and hemicellulose early in development. Later, hemicellulose becomes relatively more important. When the cell wall materials are sequentially extracted, no change in the general morphology of the cell occurs until only the noncellulosic polysaccharides and the cellulose remained. When the noncellulosic polysaccharides are then removed, the cells remain intact but are 30% less in diameter. This suggests that while cellulose is of critical importance, the noncellulosic polysaccharides may play a major role in determining the physical characteristics of the wall.  相似文献   

13.
Rhodococcus erythropolis PR4 is a marine bacterium that can degrade various alkanes including pristane, a C(19) branched alkane. This strain produces a large quantity of extracellular polysaccharides, which are assumed to play an important role in the hydrocarbon tolerance of this bacterium. The strain produced two acidic extracellular polysaccharides, FR1 and FR2, and the latter showed emulsifying activity toward clove oil, whereas the former did not. FR2 was composed of D-galactose, D-glucose, D-mannose, D-glucuronic acid, and pyruvic acid at a molar ratio of 1:1:1:1:1, and contained 2.9% (w/w) stearic acid and 4.3% (w/w) palmitic acid attached via ester bonds. Therefore, we designated FR2 as a PR4 fatty acid-containing extracellular polysaccharide or FACEPS. The chemical structure of the PR4 FACEPS polysaccharide chain was determined by 1D (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopies as well as by 2D DQF-COSY, TOCSY, HMQC, HMBC, and NOESY experiments. The sugar chain of PR4 FACEPS was shown to consist of tetrasaccharide repeating units having the following structure: [structure: see text].  相似文献   

14.
Rapid effects of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) on the mechanical properties of cell wall, and sugar compositions, intrinsic viscosity and molecular weight distribution of cell wall polysaccharides were investigated with excised epicotyl segments of Vigna angularis Ohwi et Ohashi cv. Takara.
  • 1 IAA caused cell wall loosening as studied by stress-relaxation analysis within 15 min after the IAA application.
  • 2 IAA stimulated the decrease in the content of arabinose and galactose in the hemicellulose 1 h after its application. The amounts of other component sugars in the cell wall polysaccharides remained constant during the IAA-induced segment growth.
  • 3 The intrinsic viscocity of the pectin increased as early as 30 min after the IAA application. This effect was not prevented when elongation growth of the segment was osmotically suppressed by 0.15 M mannitol.
  • 4 Gel permeation chromatography of the pectin on a Sepharose 4 B column demonstrated that IAA caused increase in the mass-average molecular weight of the pectin. Analysis of the sugar compositions of the pectin eluted from the Sepharose 4 B column indicated that IAA increased the molecular weight of the polysaccharides composed of uronic acid, galactose, rhamnose and arabinose. This effect became apparent within 30 min after the IAA application. Furthermore, IAA increased the molecular weight of the pectin when elongation growth of the epicotyl segments was osmotically suppressed by 0.15 M mannitol.
  • 5 Hemicellulose of the cell wall chromatographed on a Sepharose CL-4 B column. Analysis of the neutral sugar compositions and the iodine staining property (specific for xyloglucans) of the polysaccharide solution eluted from the column indicated that the hemicellulose consisted of xyloglucans, arabinogalactans and polysaccharides composed of xylose and/or mannose. IAA caused a decrease in the arabinogalactan content and depolymerization of xyloglucans. These IAA effects became apparent within 30 min after the IAA application. These changes occurred even when elongation growth of the epicotyl segments was osmotically suppressed by 0.15 M mannitol.
Polymerization of the pectin, degradation of arabinogalactans and depolymerization of xyloglucans appear to be involved in the mechanism by which IAA induces cell wall loosening and therefore extension growth of cells.  相似文献   

15.
Extracellular polysaccharides (EPSs) produced by an Erwinia spp. associated with a fungal canker disease of Eucalyptus were fractionated into two polysaccharides, one that was identified with that produced by Erwinia stewartii. The other has a similar structure, but with one terminal Glc residue replaced by pyruvic acid to give 4,6-O-[(R)-1-carboxyethylidene)-Galp. Their structures were determined using a combination of chemical and physical techniques including methylation analysis, periodate oxidation, low-pressure gel filtration and anion-exchange chromatographies, high-pH anion-exchange chromatography, mass spectrometry and 1D and 2D 1H NMR spectroscopy. The new polysaccharides, identified as EPS Futululu FF-1 and FF-2, have the following structures:The molecular weights of the polysaccharides range from 1.3-2.1x10(6) and their hydrodynamic properties are those of polydisperse, polyanionic biopolymers with pseudoplastic, non-thixotropic flow characteristics in aqueous solutions.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
The present study was conducted to investigate the cell wall properties in two wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars differing in their sensitivity to Al stress. Seedlings of Al-resistant, Inia66 and Al-sensitive, Kalyansona cultivars were grown in complete nutrient solutions for 4 days and then subjected to treatment solutions containing Al (0, 50 microM) in a 0.5 mM CaCl(2) solution at pH 4.5 for 24 h. Root elongation was inhibited greatly by the Al treatment in the Al-sensitive cultivar compared to the Al-resistant cultivar. The Al-resistant cultivar accumulated less amount of Al in the root apex than in the Al-sensitive cultivar. The contents of pectin and hemicellulose in roots were increased with Al stress, and this increase was more conspicuous in the Al-sensitive cultivar. The molecular mass of hemicellulosic polysaccharides was increased by the Al treatment in the Al-sensitive cultivar. The increase in the content of hemicellulose was attributed to increase in the contents of glucose, arabinose and xylose in neutral sugars. Aluminum treatment increased the contents of ferulic acid and p-coumaric acid especially in the Al-sensitive cultivar by increasing the activity of phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL, EC 4.3.1.5). Aluminum treatment markedly decreased the beta-glucanase activity in the Al-sensitive cultivar, but did not exert any effect in the Al-resistant cultivar. These results suggest that the modulation of the activity of beta-glucanase with Al stress may be involved in part in the alteration of the molecular mass of hemicellulosic polysaccharides in the Al-sensitive cultivar. The increase in the molecular mass of hemicellulosic polysaccharides and ferulic acid synthesis in the Al-sensitive cultivar with Al stress may induce the mechanical rigidity of the cell wall and inhibit the elongation of wheat roots.  相似文献   

18.
In the root of horse radish, sucrose, fructose, glucose and two unknown fructose-oligosac-charides were found in the form of free sugars, in the decreasing order just given, and large amounts of starch, hot 50% methanol-soluble polysaccharide, water-soluble polysaccharide, pectin, hemicellulose, cellulose and a small amount of lignin were found as polysaccharides. As the constructive sugar of these polysaccharides, the following, i.e., glucose, fructose, galactose, arabinose, galacturonic acid and xylose were detected.  相似文献   

19.
Softening characteristics were investigated in three types of pear fruit, namely, European pear 'La France', Chinese pear 'Yali', and Japanese pear 'Nijisseiki'. 'La France' fruit softened dramatically and developed a melting texture during ripening, while 'Yali' fruit with and without propylene treatment showed no change in flesh firmness and texture during ripening. Non-treated 'Nijisseiki' did not show a detectable decrease in flesh firmness, whereas continuous propylene treatment caused a gradual decrease in firmness resulting in a mealy texture. In 'La France', the analysis of cell wall polysaccharides revealed distinct solubilization and depolymerization of pectin and hemicellulose during fruit softening. In 'Nijisseiki', propylene treatment led to the solubilization and depolymerization of pectic polysaccharides to a limited extent, but not of hemicellulose. In 'Yali', hemicellulose polysaccharides were depolymerized during ripening, but there was hardly any change in pectic polysaccharides except in the water-soluble fraction. PC-PG1 and PC-PG2, two polygalacturonase (PG) genes, were expressed in 'La France' fruit during ripening, while only PC-PG2 was expressed in 'Nijisseiki' and neither PC-PG1 or PC-PG2 was expressed in 'Yali'. The expression pattern of PC-XET1 was constitutive during ripening in all three pear types. PG activity measured by the reducing sugar assay increased in all three pears during ripening. However, viscometric measurements showed that the levels of endo-PG activity were high in 'La France', low in 'Nijisseiki', and undetectable in 'Yali' fruits. These results suggest that, in pears, cell wall degradation is correlated with a decrease in firmness during ripening and the modification of both pectin and hemicellulose are essential for the development of a melting texture. Furthermore, the data suggest that different softening behaviours during ripening among the three pear fruits may be caused by different endo-PG activity and different expression of PG genes.  相似文献   

20.
Purified hemicellulose isolated from a young bael (Aegle marmelos) tree with 2.5m sodium hydroxide contained d-xylose and 4-O-methyl-d-glucoronic acid in the molar ratio of 7.43:1; traces of glucose, galactose, rhamnose, and arabinose were also present. The linkages between the monosaccharide units were determined by methylation analysis of a hemicellulose fraction (II A) and carboxyl-reduced, hemicellulose II A, and the results were corroborated by those from periodate oxidation and Smith degradation. The anomeric configurations of the d-xylopyranosyl residues were determined by chromium(VI) trioxide oxidation of the acetylated, carboxyl-reduced hemicellulose, and the aldobiouronic acid obtained from graded hydrolysis was characterized. These experiments clearly revealed the structure of this hemicellulose.  相似文献   

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