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 31 毫秒
1.
The relative mass of the cell walls of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) cells adapted to grow in medium containing 30% polyethylene glycol 8000 or 428 millimolar NaCl was reduced to about 50% of that of the walls of unadapted cells. Cellulose synthesis was inhibited substantially in adapted cells. The proportions of total pectin in walls of unadapted and adapted cells were about the same, but substantial amount of uronic acid-rich material from walls of cells adapted to either NaCl or polyethylene glycol was more easily extracted with cold sodium ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid solutions (NM Iraki et al. [1989] Plant Physiol. 91: 39-47). We examined the linkage composition of the pectic and hemicellulosic polysaccharides to ascertain chemical factors that may explain this difference in physical behavior. Adaptation to stress resulted in the formation of a loosely bound shell of polygalacturonic acid and rhamnogalacturonan. Pectins extracted from walls of adapted cells by either cold sodium ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid or hot ammonium oxalate were particularly enriched in rhamnose. Compared to pectins of unadapted cells, rhamnosyl units of the rhamnogalacturonans of adapted cells were more highly substituted with polymers containing arabinose and galactose, but the side groups were of greatly reduced molecular size. Possible functional roles of these modifications in cell wall metabolism related to adaptation to osmotic stress are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Cells of tobacco adapted to grow in high concentrations of NaCl develop tight zones of adhesion between the plasma membrane and cell wall, revealed by concave plasmolysis in osmotic solutions. Unadapted cells exhibit mostly convex plasmolysis and exhibit little or no adhesive character. Wall-less protoplasts isolated from the adapted cells retain the complementary adhesive character and adhere tightly to each other, whereas protoplasts from unadapted cells do not. The hexapeptide gly- arg-gly-asp -ser-pro, in which the arg-gly-asp represents the integrin-binding domain of several animal extracellular matrix proteins, specifically blocks adhesion of the protoplasts. A control hexapeptide, gly-arg-gly-glu-ser-pro, is ineffective in blocking adhesion. Tobacco proteins immunologically related to human vitronectin were found in cell walls and membranes of unadapted and NaCl-adapted cells, but the total extractable vitronectin-like protein was enriched in the adapted cells. Tobacco proteins immunologically related to human fibronectin were found in membranes and cell walls of NaCl-adapted cells but not in those from unadapted cells. Our observations indicate that plant cells possess cell-matrix adhesion complexes similar to animal cells, and these adhesion complexes accumulate in growth-limited cells adapted to saline stress.  相似文献   

3.
His I  Driouich A  Nicol F  Jauneau A  Höfte H 《Planta》2001,212(3):348-358
Korrigan (kor) is a dwarf mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. that is deficient in a membrane-bound endo-1,4-beta-glucanase. The effect of the mutation on the pectin network has been studied in kor by microscopical techniques associated with various probes specific for different classes of pectic polysaccharides. The localisation of native crystalline cellulose was also examined using the cellobiohydrolase I-gold probe. The investigations were focused on the external cell walls of the epidermis, a cell layer that, in a number of plant species, has been shown to be growth limiting. Anionic sites associated with pectic polymers were quantified using the cationic gold probe. Homogalacturonans were quantified using polyclonal anti-polygalacturonic acid/rhamnogalacturonan I antibodies recognising polygalacturonic acid, and monoclonal JIM7 and JIM5 antibodies recognising homogalacturonans with a high or low degree of methyl-esterification, respectively. Rhamnogalacturonans were quantified with two monoclonal antibodies, LM5, recognising beta-1,4 galactan side chains of rhamnogalacturonan I, and CCRCM2. Our results show a marked increase in homogalacturonan epitopes and a decrease in rhamnogalacturonan epitopes in kor compared to the wild type. A substantial decrease in cellobiohydrolase I-gold labelling was also observed in the mutant cell walls. These findings demonstrate that a deficiency in an endo-1,4-beta-glucanase, which is in principle not directly implicated in pectin metabolism, can induce important changes in pectin composition in the primary cell wall. The changes indicate the existence of feedback mechanisms controlling the synthesis and/or deposition of pectic polysaccharides in primary cell walls.  相似文献   

4.
The function of the arabinan and galactan side-chains of pectin remains unknown. We describe 13C NMR experiments designed to yield spectra from the most mobile polymer components of hydrated cell walls isolated from a range of plant species. In pectin-rich cell walls, these corresponded to the pectic side-chains. The arabinan side-chains were in general more mobile than the galactans, but the long galactan side-chains of potato pectin showed high mobility. Due to motional line-narrowing effects these arabinan and galactan chains gave 13C NMR spectra of higher resolution than has previously been observed from 'solid' biopolymers. These spectra were similar to those reported for the arabinan and galactan polymers in the solution state, implying time-averaged conformations resembling those found in solution. The mobility of the highly esterified galacturonan in citrus cell walls overlapped with the lower end of the mobility range characteristic of the pectic side-chains. The cellulose-rich cell walls of flax phloem fibres gave spectra of low intensity corresponding to mobile type II arabinogalactans. Cell walls from oat coleoptiles appeared to contain no polymers as mobile as the pectic arabinans and galactans in primary cell walls of the other species examined. These properties of the pectic side-chains suggest a role in interacting with water.  相似文献   

5.
F. Liners  P. Van Cutsem 《Protoplasma》1992,170(1-2):10-21
Summary A monoclonal antibody (2 F 4) recognizing a conformational epitope of polygalacturonic acid was used for immunogold localization of pectins in walls of suspension-cultured carrot (D. carota L.) cells at the electron microscopic level. In microcolonies of young or mature cells, polygalacturonic acid was essentially located on the middle lamella material expanded at three-way junctions between cells or lining intercellular spaces but was not found in primary walls. Middle lamellae far from junction zones and intercellular spaces were not recognized. Largely esterified pectic polymers, only detected by the 2 F 4 antibodies after on-grid de-esterification treatment by pectin methyl esterases, were present within all primary cell walls. Golgi bodies and associated vesicles were also labeled by the 2 F 4 antibodies only after de-esterification treatment, which indicates that pectic polymers are synthesized and secreted in a highly esterified form. A decrease of pectin esterification, which results probably from an in situ enzymatic de-esterification of the pectic polymers of the primary walls, was observed in senescent cells. These results are discussed in relation to biochemical analyses showing changes of the methyl ester content of pectins during the cell-wall growth.  相似文献   

6.
Highly reproducible Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra from both single onion (Allium cepa) cell walls and their constituent polymers were obtained under a variety of sampling conditions. The specificity of the chemical extraction sequence used in the preparation of the material was confirmed: pectins only are extracted by cyclohexanediaminetetraacetic acid and sodium carbonate, whereas xyloglucans are extracted by increasing concentrations of potassium hydroxide. There was very little contamination of the first potassium hydroxide extract with residual pectin. The low abundance of both phenolics and protein was also confirmed. The first sodium carbonate extraction almost completely removes esters remaining in the cell wall. We have demonstrated that FTIR spectroscopy can detect large conformational changes in pectic polymers on removal from the cell wall and on drying. FTIR spectroscopy provides a powerful and rapid assay for wall components and putative cross-links by identifying polymers and functional groups nondestructively in muro. The availability of micro-sampling and data acquisition techniques that permit subtraction of the blanket absorption of water make FTIR spectroscopy particularly suitable for studies of cell wall architecture. The use of polarizers with the microscope accessory permits determination of the orientation of particular functional groups with respect to the direction of cell elongation in carrot suspension cells.  相似文献   

7.
Cell walls isolated from dicotyledon tissues compete with natural plant host sites for Agrobacterium tumefaciens (strain B6) when co-inoculated with infectious bacteria, thereby reducing tumor initiation. Removal of the pectic fraction from the cell walls results in loss of inhibition and the soluble pectic fraction is inhibitory. On treatment with pectin methyl transferase plus S-adenosyl-L-methionine these cell walls become less inhibitory and this change is reversible by pectinesterase. Cell walls isolated from monocotyledons, crown gall tumors or embryonic dicotyledons do not compete for Agrobacterium in the infection assay. These cell walls become inhibitory on treatment with pectinesterase and this is partially reversed by pectin methyl transferase. These data indicate that the pectic portion of the host cell wall is involved in the Agrobacterium -host adherence which is essential for tumor initiation and that the degree of methylation of polygalacturonic acid is critical to this adherence.  相似文献   

8.
Cells of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) adapted to grow in severe osmotic stress of 428 millimolar NaCl (−23 bar) or 30% polyethylene glycol 8000 (−28 bar) exhibit a drastically altered growth physiology that results in slower cell expansion and fully expanded cells with volumes only one-fifth to one-eighth those of unadapted cells. This reduced cell volume occurs despite maintenance of turgor pressures sometimes severalfold higher than those of unadapted cells. This report and others (NM Iraki et al [1989] Plant Physiol 90: 000-000 and 000-000) document physical and biochemical alterations of the cell walls which might explain how adapted cells decrease the ability of the wall to expand despite diversion of carbon used for osmotic adjustment away from synthesis of cell wall polysaccharides. Tensile strength measured by a gas decompression technique showed empirically that walls of NaCl-adapted cells are much weaker than those of unadapted cells. Correlated with this weakening was a substantial decrease in the proportion of crystalline cellulose in the primary cell wall. Even though the amount of insoluble protein associated with the wall was increased relative to other wall components, the amount of hydroxyproline in the insoluble protein of the wall was only about 10% that of unadapted cells. These results indicate that a cellulosic-extensin framework is a primary determinant of absolute wall tensile strength, but complete formation of this framework apparently is sacrificed to divert carbon to substances needed for osmotic adjustment. We propose that the absolute mass of this framework is not a principal determinant of the ability of the cell wall to extend.  相似文献   

9.
The class of cell wall polysaccharides that undergoes the most extensive modification during tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) fruit ripening is pectin. De-esterification of the polygalacturonic acid backbone by pectin methylesterase facilitates the depolymerization of pectins by polygalacturonase II (PGII). To investigate the spatial aspects of the de-esterification of cell wall pectins and the subsequent deposition of PGII, we have used antibodies to relatively methylesterified and nonesterified pectic epitopes and to the PGII protein on thin sections of pericarp tissue at different developmental stages. De-esterification of pectins and deposition of PGII protein occur in block-like domains within the cell wall. The boundaries of these domains are distinct and persistent, implying strict, spatial regulation of enzymic activities. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of proteins strongly associated with cell walls of pericarp tissue at each stage of fruit development show ripening-related changes in this protein population. Western blots of these gels with anti-PGII antiserum demonstrate that PGII expression is ripening-related. The PGII co-extracts with specific pectic fractions extracted with imidazole or with Na2CO3 at 0[deg]C from the walls of red-ripe pericarp tissue, indicating that the strong association between PGII and the cell wall involves binding to particular pectic polysaccharides.  相似文献   

10.
The chemical composition of extracellular polymers released by cells of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv W38) adapted to a medium containing 30% polyethylene glycol 8000 (−28 bar) or 428 millimolar NaCl (−23 bar) was compared to the composition of those released by unadapted cells. Unadapted cells released uronic acid-rich material of high molecular weight, arabinogalactan-proteins, low molecular weight fragments of hemicellulosic polysaccharides, and a small amount of protein. Cells adapted to grow in medium containing NaCl released arabinogalactan and large amounts of protein but not the uronic acid-rich material, and cells adapted to grow in polyethylene glycol released only small amounts of an arabinogalactan of much lower molecular weight and some protein. Secretion of all material was nearly blocked by polyethylene glycol, but when cells were transferred to a medium containing iso-osmolar mannitol, they again released extracellular polymers at rates similar to those of unadapted cells. Like cells adapted to NaCl, however, these cells released arabinogalactan and large amounts of protein but only small amounts of the uronic acid-rich material. Media of NaCl-adapted cells were enriched in 40, 29, and 11 kilodalton polypeptides. CaCl2 extracted the 40 and 11 kilodalton polypeptides from walls of unadapted cells, but the 29 kilodalton polypeptide was found only in the medium of the NaCl-adapted cells. Accumulation of low molecular weight polysaccharide fragments in the medium was also substantially reduced in both NaCl- and polyethylene glycol-adapted cells, and specifically, the material was composed of lower proportions of xyloglucan fragments. Our results indicate that adaptation to saline or water stress results in inhibition of both the hydrolysis of hemicellulosic xyloglucan and release of uronic acid-rich material into the culture medium.  相似文献   

11.
Changes in Cell Wall Polysaccharides of Green Bean Pods during Development   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The changes in cell wall polysaccharides and selected cell wall-modifying enzymes were studied during the development of green bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) pods. An overall increase of cell wall material on a dry-weight basis was observed during pod development. Major changes were detected in the pectic polymers. Young, exponentially growing cell walls contained large amounts of neutral, sugar-rich pectic polymers (rhamnogalacturonan), which were water insoluble and relatively tightly connected to the cell wall. During elongation, more galactose-rich pectic polymers were deposited into the cell wall. In addition, the level of branched rhamnogalacturonan remained constant, while the level of linear homogalacturonan steadily increased. During maturation of the pods, galactose-rich pectic polymers were degraded, while the accumulation of soluble homogalacturonan continued. During senescence there was an increase in the amount of ionically complexed pectins, mainly at the expense of freely soluble pectins. The most abundant of the enzymes tested for was pectin methylesterase. Peroxidase, beta-galactosidase, and alpha-arabinosidase were also detected in appreciable amounts. Polygalacturonase was detected only in very small amounts throughout development. The relationship between endogenous enzyme levels and the properties of cell wall polymers is discussed with respect to cell wall synthesis and degradation.  相似文献   

12.
The mechanism of aluminium-induced inhibition of root elongation is still not well understood. It is a matter of debate whether the primary lesions of Al toxicity are apoplastic or symplastic. The present paper summarises experimental evidence which offers new avenues in the understanding of Al toxicity and resistance in maize. Application of Al for 1 h to individual 1 mm sections of the root apex only inhibited root elongation if applied to the first 3 apical mm. The most Al-sensitive apical root zone appeared to be the 1–2 mm segment. Aluminium-induced prominent alterations in both the microtubular (disintegration) and the actin cytoskeleton (altered polymerisation patterns) were found especially in the apical 1–2 mm zone using monoclonal antibodies. Since accumulation of Al in the root apoplast is dependent on the properties of the pectic matrix, we investigated whether Al uptake and toxicity could be modulated by changing the pectin content of the cell walls through pre-treatment of intact maize plants with 150 mM NaCl for 5 days. NaCl-adapted plants with higher pectin content accumulated more Al in their root apices and they were more Al-sensitive as indicated by more severe inhibition of root elongation and enhanced callose induction by Al. This special role of the pectic matrix of the cell walls in the modulation of Al toxicity is also indicated by a close positive correlation between pectin, Al, and Al-induced callose contents of 1 mm root segments along the 5 mm root apex. On the basis of the presented data we suggest that the rapid disorganisation of the cytoskeleton leading to root growth inhibition may be mediated by interaction of Al with the apoplastic side of the cell wall – plasma membrane – cytoskeleton continuum. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

13.
Cell walls of grasses have two major polysaccharides that contain uronic acids, the hemicellulosic glucuronoarabinoxylans and the galactosyluronic acid-rich pectins. A technique whereby esterified uronic acid carboxyl groups are reduced selectively to yield their respective 6,6-dideuterio neutral sugars was used to determine the extent of esterification and changes in esterification of these two uronic acids during elongation of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles. The glucosyluronic acids of glucuronoarabinoxylans did not appear to be esterified at any time during coleoptile elongation. The galactosyluronic acids of embryonal coleoptiles were about 65% esterified, but this proportion increased to nearly 80% during the rapid elongation phase before returning to about 60% at the end of elongation. Methyl esters accounted for about two-thirds of the total esterified galacturonic acid in cell walls of unexpanded coleoptiles. The proportion of methyl esters decreased throughout elongation and did not account for the increase in the proportion of esterified galactosyluronic acid units during growth. The results indicate that the galactosyluronic acid units of grass pectic polysaccharides may be converted to other kinds of esters or form ester-like chemical interactions during expansion of the cell wall. Accumulation of novel esters or ester-like interactions is coincident with covalent attachment of polymers containing galactosyluronic acid units to the cell wall.  相似文献   

14.
Carbon use efficiencies (gram cell organic dry weight accumulated per gram sugar assimilated from the medium) of unadapted and NaCl-adapted (428 millimolar) cells of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. var Wisconsin 38) were determined to evaluate metabolic costs associated with growth and survival in a saline environment. No net increase in carbon costs was associated with salt adaptation. At low substrate levels, carbon use efficiencies of unadapted and NaCl-adapted cells were not appreciably different (0.495 and 0.422, respectively) and at higher substrate levels carbon use efficiency of NaCl-adapted cells was clearly higher than that of unadapted cells. These results indicate that a homeostasis of metabolic efficiency is established after cells have adapted to NaCl. Altered carbon availability does not cause the reduced cell volume that results from adaptation to NaCl. This does not preclude, however, the possibility that altered intracellular partitioning of carbon affects cell expansion.  相似文献   

15.
Distribution of pectins in cell walls of maturing anther of Allium cepa L. was investigated. The monoclonal antibodies against defined epitopes of pectin were used: JIM5 recognizing unesterified pectin and JIM7 recognizing esterified pectin. It has been found that the cell walls of all anther tissues mainly contain esterified pectins. In the somatic tissues only small amounts of unesterified pectins are present in the cell wall junctions and adjacent middle lamellae and in the cell walls of the connective tissue. Thickening of the epiderm cell walls and growth of trabeculae in endothecium are completed through deposition of esterified pectins. In the cell walls of the middle layer and tapetum, unesterified pectins have been found only prior to their disintegration. The primary wall of microsporocytes is made up mainly of esterified pectins. Unesterified pectins occur outside microsporocytes only prior to the callose isolation stage. The presence of esterified pectins has also been detected on the surface of the callose wall surrounding dividing microsporocytes. Lysis of those pectins takes place after microsporogenesis, simultaneously with the lysis of the callosic walls. Before these processes pectins are unesterified. In the sporoderm of pollen grains mainly esterified pectins occur. They have been localized in the intine and aperture. The level of unesterified pectins in the intine is markedly lower.  相似文献   

16.
The localization of cell wall polysaccharides of the fused petals of monocotyledonous Sandersonia aurantiaca flowers has been identified using antibodies directed to pectin and xyloglucan epitopes and detection by fluorescence microscopy. Cross sections of the petal tissue were taken from cut flowers in bud and at various stages of maturity and senescence. Patterns of esterification in pectin backbones were identified by JIM5 and 2F4 labelling. Pectic galactan and arabinan side branches were detected by LM5 and LM6, respectively, while fucosylated xyloglucan was identified by CCRC-M1. The labelling patterns highlighted compositional differences between walls of the outer/inner epidermis compared to the spongy parenchyma cells of the interior mesophyll for fucosylated xyloglucan and arabinan. Partially esterified homogalacturonan was present in the junction zones of the outer epidermis and points of contact between cells of the mesophyll, and persisted throughout senescence. Pectic galactans were ubiquitous in the outer and inner epidermal cell walls and walls of the interior mesophyll at flower opening, whereas pectic arabinan was found predominantly in the epidermal cells. Galactan was lost from walls of all cells as flowers began to senesce, while fucosylated xyloglucan appeared to increase over this time. Such differences in the location of polysaccharides and the timing of changes suggest distinct combinations of certain polysaccharides offer mechanical and rheological advantages that may assist with flower opening and senescence.  相似文献   

17.
Flax fibers have been the subject of many biochemical studies, which revealed that cellulose and pectins are the major constituents of their walls. In contrast, little is known about the location of these polymers within the walls of mature fibers by microscopic methods. This has been technically hampered by the very thick secondary wall of fibers, resulting in inadequate tissue preservation unsuitable for immunogold microscopy. In this study, we adapted the basic chemical fixation, dehydration and infiltration methods to achieve a good preservation of the cell structures of mature fibers and reduced damage to antigens. We were able to apply postembedding immunocytochemical techniques to map the location of various pectic epitopes within the walls of mature fibers. Our immunolabeling data show that homogalacturonans were exclusively found in the middle lamellae and the cell junctions but were not detectable in the secondary wall. In contrast, rhamnogalacturonan I (RG I)-associated epitopes, as well as galactan and arabinan epitopes, were abundantly distributed over the secondary wall of mature fibers.  相似文献   

18.
After a brief period of biotrophic growth, the anthracnose fungus Colletotrichum lindemuthianum (Sacc. et Mgn.) Bri et Cav. develops extensively in bean leaf cells, causing severe wall alterations and death of the host protoplast. Aplysia gonad lectin, a polygalacturonic acid-binding agglutinin, was complexed to gold and used to study the extent of pectin breakdown during the necrotrophic phase of the infection process. In view of its specific binding properties for the endopolygalacturonase produced by C. lindemuthianum, a polygalacturonase-inhibiting protein isolated from bean cell walls was successfully tagged with gold particles and used for localizing the sites of enzyme accumulation in infected host tissues. The basal level of endopolygalacturonase produced by C. lindemuthianum grown in culture was found to increase severalfold when the fungus developed in host plant tissues. The enzyme was able to diffuse freely in the host cell wall, causing drastic degradation of the pectic material of primary walls and middle lamella matrices. The enzymatic alteration of plant cell walls was accompanied by the release of pectic fragments and by the accumulation of pectic molecules at specific sites, such as intercellular spaces and aggregated cytoplasm of infected host cells. The occurrence of pectic molecules at those sites where fungal growth is likely to be restricted is discussed in relation to their origin and their implication in the plant's defense system.  相似文献   

19.
The Myrothamnus flabellifolius leaf cell wall and its response to desiccation were investigated using electron microscopic, biochemical, and immunocytochemical techniques. Electron microscopy revealed desiccation-induced cell wall folding in the majority of mesophyll and epidermal cells. Thick-walled vascular tissue and sclerenchymous ribs did not fold and supported the surrounding tissue, thereby limiting the extent of leaf shrinkage and allowing leaf morphology to be rapidly regained upon rehydration. Isolated cell walls from hydrated and desiccated M. flabellifolius leaves were fractionated into their constituent polymers and the resulting fractions were analyzed for monosaccharide content. Significant differences between hydrated and desiccated states were observed in the water-soluble buffer extract, pectin fractions, and the arabinogalactan protein-rich extract. A marked increase in galacturonic acid was found in the alkali-insoluble pectic fraction. Xyloglucan structure was analyzed and shown to be of the standard dicotyledonous pattern. Immunocytochemical analysis determined the cellular location of the various epitopes associated with cell wall components, including pectin, xyloglucan, and arabinogalactan proteins, in hydrated and desiccated leaf tissue. The most striking observation was a constitutively present high concentration of arabinose, which was associated with pectin, presumably in the form of arabinan polymers. We propose that the arabinan-rich leaf cell wall of M. flabellifolius possesses the necessary structural properties to be able to undergo repeated periods of desiccation and rehydration.  相似文献   

20.
Osmotin is a major protein which accumulates in tobacco cells (Nicotiana tabacum L. var Wisconsin 38) adapted to low water potentials. Quantitation of osmotin levels by immunoblots indicated that cells adapted to 428 millimolar NaCl contained 4 to 30 times the level of osmotin found in unadapted cells, depending on the stage of growth. Unadapted cells accumulated low levels of osmotin with apparent isoelectric points, (pl) of 7.8 and >8.2. Upon transfer of NaCl-adapted cells to medium without NaCl and subsequent growth for many cell generations, the amount of osmotin declined gradually to a level intermediate between that found in adapted and unadapted cells. NaCl-adapted cells grown in the absence of NaCl accumulated both pl forms; however, the form accumulated by cells adapted to NaCl (pl > 8.2) was most abundant. Adapted cells grown in the absence of NaCl exhibited absolute growth rates and NaCl tolerance levels which were intermediate to those of NaCl-adapted and unadapted cells. The association between osmotin accumulation and stable NaCl tolerance indicates that cells with a stable genetic change affecting the accumulation of osmotin are selected during prolonged exposure to high levels of NaCl. This stable alteration in gene expression probably affects salt tolerance.  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