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1.
A synthetic substance, 4-ethoxy-l-(p-tolyl)-s-triazine-2,6(1H,3H)-dione [TA] dramatically promoted mesocotyl growth in dark-grownrice (Oryza sativa L. cv. Nato) seedlings, the optimal concentrationbeing 0.1–0.2 mM. Changes in the cell wall compositionof the rice mesocotyls were examined in relation to growth andtreatment with 0.1 mM TA. The amount of the cell wall increasedduring the elongation in control and treated mesocotyls. Particularly,TA caused a large increase in the amount of the cell wall permesocotyl but a decrease per unit length of mesocotyl. Hydrolysisof the cell wall with trifluoroacetic acid liberated xylose,glucose, arabinose, galactose, and trace amounts of rhamnose,fucose and mannose. An increase in the relative amount of xyloseand a decrease in that of glucose in the noncellulosic fractionduring growth were found in control and treated mesocotyl walls.On the 2nd day after planting when the mesocotyl emerged, TAsignificantly affected the cell wall composition; TA decreasedthe relative amount of -cellulose in the wall, and caused anincrease in the relative amount of glucose and decreases inthose of xylose and arabinose in the noncellulosic fraction. 1This paper is Part 7 in the series "Plant Growth-regulatingActivities of Isourea Derivatives and Related Compounds." (Received March 18, 1980; )  相似文献   

2.
A technique of centrifuging pea epicotyl sections which extracts water-soluble cell wall polysaccharides with less than 1.5% cytoplasmic contamination as revealed by malate dehydrogenase activity determinations was developed. Tests for protein, hexose, pentose, and malate dehydrogenase indicate that significant damage to the cells occurs above 3,000g. Below this force, there is little damage, as evidenced by the similar growth rates of centrifuged and noncentrifuged sections. Centrifugation at 1,000g extracts polysaccharides containing rhamnose, fucose, arabinose, xylose, mannose, galactose, and glucose. An increase in xylose and glucose, presumably xyloglucan, is induced by treating sections with indoleacetic acid. Much of the alcohol-insoluble, water-soluble polysaccharide within the wall is extractable by centrifugation, since nearly as much arabinose and xylose are extractable by centrifugation as by homogenization. The utility of this method for the study of cell wall metabolism is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
C hapman , S.J. & L ynch , J.M. 1984. A note on the formation of microbial polysaccharide from wheat straw decomposed in the absence of soil. Journal of Applied Bacteriology 56 , 337–342.
The proportions of neutral sugars in fresh and decomposed wheat straw polysaccharide were similar, irrespective of the oxygen concentration used during breakdown. Polysaccharide extracted by hot water from the decomposed straw was composed mainly of galactose, glucose and mannose with smaller quantities of arabinose, xylose, rhamnose, fucose and ribose. The presence of these sugars indicates a mainly microbial origin for the polysaccharide but with some soluble hemi-cellulose breakdown products. The polysaccharide precipitable with 70% (v/v) ethanol accounted for 0.5% (w/w) of the degraded straw. The extracted polysaccharide was shown to increase the aggregate stability of Mount St Helens volcanic ash.  相似文献   

4.
The preparation and chemical poperties of the cell walls of Leptospira biflexa Urawa and Treponema pallidum Reiter are described. Both cell walls are composed mainly of polysaccharides and peptidoglycans. The data of chemical analysis indicate that the cell wall of L. biflexa Urawa contains rhamnose, arabinose, xylose, mannose, galactose, glucose and unidentified sugars as neutral sugars, and alanine, glutamic acid, α,ε-diaminopimelic acid, glucosamine and muramic acid as major amino acids and amino sugars. As major chemical constituents of the cell wall of T. pallidum Reiter, rhamnose, arabinose, xylose, mannose, galactose, glucose, alanine, glutamic acid, ornithine, glycine, glucosamine and muramic acid have been detected. The chemical properties of protein and polysaccharide fractions prepared from the cells of T. pallidum Reiter were also partially examined.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
A systematic study of bioconversion of lignocellulosic sugars to acetic acid by Moorella thermoacetica (strain ATCC 39073) was conducted. Four different water-soluble fractions (hydrolysates) obtained after steam pretreatment of lignocellulosic biomass were selected and fermented to acetic acid in batch fermentations. M. thermoacetica can effectively ferment xylose and glucose in hydrolysates from wheat straw, forest residues, switchgrass, and sugarcane straw to acetic acid. Xylose and glucose were completely utilized, with xylose being consumed first. M. thermoacetica consumed up to 62 % of arabinose, 49 % galactose and 66 % of mannose within 72 h of fermentation in the mixture of lignocellulosic sugars. The highest acetic acid yield was obtained from sugarcane straw hydrolysate, with 71 % of theoretical yield based on total sugars (17 g/L acetic acid from 24 g/L total sugars). The lowest acetic acid yield was observed in forest residues hydrolysate, with 39 % of theoretical yield based on total sugars (18 g/L acetic acid from 49 g/L total sugars). Process derived compounds from steam explosion pretreatment, including 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (0.4 g/L), furfural (0.1 g/L) and total phenolics (3 g/L), did not inhibit microbial growth and acetic acid production yield. This research identified two major factors that adversely affected acetic acid yield in all hydrolysates, especially in forest residues: (i) glucose to xylose ratio and (ii) incomplete consumption of arabinose, galactose and mannose. For efficient bioconversion of lignocellulosic sugars to acetic acid, it is imperative to have an appropriate balance of sugars in a hydrolysate. Hence, the choice of lignocellulosic biomass and steam pretreatment design are fundamental steps for the industrial application of this process.  相似文献   

7.
Using high-resolution GC, changes in total free galactose, myo-inositol, arabinose, xylose, rhamnose and mannose have been studied in pericarp tiss  相似文献   

8.
Separation of component polysaccharides in extractable fractions of the noncellulosic matrix of Avena sativa coleoptile cell walls shows that the principal classes of polymers present are glucuronoarabinoxylans (GAX) and iodine-negative hemicellulosic β-glucans. Rhamnogalacturonan is a minor component. GAX contains about 5–10% glucuronic acid and its 4-O-methyl ether, arabinose in amount almost equal to xylose, and a small amount of galactose; some subfractions contained appreciable amounts of glucose and galacturonic acid but these may derive from separate, contaminating polysaccharides. From the sedimentation and diffusion coefficients and intrinsic viscosities of one subfraction each of the GAX and of the hemicellulosic glucan that had been purified to apparent homogeneity by criteria of sedimentation and borate electrophoresis, MWs of about 200 000 were calculated by two methods. The viscosity characteristics and gel-forming ability of the hemicellulosic glucan give evidence of appreciable molecular interactions which suggest that this polymer is an important structural component of the cell wall.  相似文献   

9.
Auxin-induced elongation and cell wall polysaccharide metabolism were studied in excised hypocotyl sections of ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) seedlings. Sections excised from hypocotyls of ponderosa pine elongate in response to the addition of auxin. The neutral sugar composition of the extracellular solution removed from hypocotyl sections by centrifugation was examined. In cell wall solution from freshly excised sections, glucose, galactose, xylose, and arabinose make up more than 90% of the neutral sugars, while rhamnose, fucose, and mannose are relatively minor components. The neutral sugar composition of the polysaccharides of the pine cell wall solution is both qualitatively and quantitatively similar to that of pea. Following auxin treatment of pine hypocotyls, the neutral sugar composition of the cell wall changes; glucose, xylose, rhamnose, and fucose increase by nearly 2-fold relative to controls in buffer without auxin. These changes in neutral sugars in response to auxin treatment are similar to those found in pea, with the exception that in pea, rhamnose levels decline in response to auxin treatment.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Carbohydrate-containing polymers have been extracted with water from the fleshy, lobed stems of Opuntia ficus-indica cv “Burbank's Spineless”. By ion exchange chromatography, the material was separated into one neutral and two acidic fractions. Each fraction was separated in two by gel filtration. The neutral fractions consisted of two glucans and a glycoprotein, containing arabinose and galactose. All four acidic fractions contained galacturonic acid, arabinose, rhamnose, galactose and xylose in different proportions. The cell wall structure of O. ficus-indica is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Sugar compositions of cell walls of dark-grown coleoptiles from12 barley strains, 11 of which were coleoptilar semi-dwarf strains,were analyzed on days 2 and 3 after germination. Major wallcomponents of the 12 strains were arabinose, xylose, and glucosein hemicellulose and cellulose; minor components were galactoseand mannose. The sugar content of each wall component per unit length wasnot correlated to any growth parameters calculated from a logisticequation simulating coleoptile growth, but the relative contentsof galactose and mannose in relation to the total wall sugarcontent was correlated to the growth rate on day 3 and the growthcontinuing period. These facts suggest that growth of these12 barley strains in the late growth stage is regulated by theminor wall components, galactose and mannose. 1 Dedicated to the late Professor Joji Ashida. (Received October 12, 1982; Accepted January 12, 1983)  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
15.
The effect of ethylene on cell wall metabolism in sections excised from etiolated pea stems was studied. Ethylene causes an inhibition of elongation and a pronounced radial expansion of pea internodes as shown by an increase in the fresh weight of excised, 1-cm sections. Cell wall metabolism was studied using centrifugation to remove the cell wall solution from sections. The principal neutral sugars in the cell wall solution extracted with H2O are arabinose, xylose, galactose, and glucose. Both xylose and glucose decline relative to controls in air within 1 hour of exposure to ethylene. Arabinose and galactose levels are not altered by ethylene until 8 hours of treatment, whereupon they decline in controls in air relative to ethylene treatment. When alcohol-insoluble polymers are fractionated into neutral and acidic polysaccharides, xylose and glucose predominate in the neutral fraction and arabinose and galactose in the acidic fraction. Ethylene depresses the levels of xylose and glucose in the neutral fraction and elevates arabinose and galactose in the acidic fraction. Ethylene treatment does not affect the level of uronic acids extracted with H2O; however, the level of hydroxyproline-rich proteins in this water-extracted cell wall solution is increased by ethylene. Extraction of sections with CaCl2 results in an increase in the levels of neutral sugars particularly arabinose. Ethylene depresses the yield of arabinose in calcium-extracted solution relative to controls in air. Similarly, extraction with CaCl2 increases the yield of extracted hydroxyproline in ethanol-insoluble polymers and ethylene depresses its level relative to controls. Metabolism of uronic acids and neutral sugars and growth in response to ethylene treatment contrast markedly with auxin-induced polysaccharide metabolism and growth. With auxin, sections increase mostly in length not radius, and this growth form is associated with an increase in the levels of xylose, glucose, and uronic acids. With ethylene, on the other hand, stem elongation is suppressed and expansion is promoted, and this growth pattern is associated with a decrease in xylose and glucose in the ethanol-insoluble polysaccharides.  相似文献   

16.
  1. 1. The cell wall of Chlorella ellipsoidea was fractionated intotwo components, alkali-soluble hemicellulose and alkali-insoluble"rigid wall". The former was composed of several neutral sugars,i.e. rhamnose, xylose, arabinose, mannose and galactose, andthe latter had glucosamine as a main constituent sugar.
  2. 2.Quantitative changes in both hemicellulose and "rigid wall"contents during the cell cycle were followed using synchronouslygrown cells. The two cell wall components showed markedly differentchanges. Hemicellulose increased in proportion to the enlargementof the cell surface area in the growing phase, while the "rigidwall" remained almost constant in this phase. The "rigid wall"increased only in the reproduction phase—the time of autosporeformation.
(Received September 26, 1977; )  相似文献   

17.
《Phytochemistry》1986,25(2):373-376
The carbohydrate composition of the 80% ethanol-insoluble polysaccharides (EIP) from water extracts of ‘Rutgers,’ rin (ripening inhibitor) and nor (non-ripening) tomatoes has been determined. The amount of EIP extracted from ‘Rutgers’ fruit increased from 0.34 to 0.61 mg/g fr. wt during ripening little change occurred in rin or nor fruit. The carbohydrate composition (μg/g fr. wt) of EIP from mature green fruit was: galacturonic acid (48); rhamnose (3); arabinose (20); xylose (48); mannose (31); glucose (139); galactose (51). The most obvious changes that accompanied ripening were a 7.4-fold and 4-fold increase in galacturonic acid and rhamnose content, respectively. These changes were attenuated in the ripening mutants. EIP was fractionated into three major peaks by using DEAE-cellulose ion exchange chromatography. The first peak, which was not retained by the column, contained predominantly glucose and mannose, with lower amounts of galacturonic acid and galactose. The two retained peaks which eluted at 0.1 and 0.2 M sodium chloride contained primarily galacturonic acid, xylose, galactose and arabinose. The galacturonic acid content of these two fractions increased substantially during ripening, whereas the other components decreased. No changes were evident in the ripening mutants. No increase in water-soluble polysaccharides high in galactose content was observed during ripening.  相似文献   

18.
19.
  1. The sugars which induced gigantism of Chlorella cells wereglucose,fructose, galactose, mannose, xylose and arabinose.These sugarswere utilized as respiratory substrates by thealgal cells.
  2. The cellular division of Chlorella was stimulatedby glucoseand galactose, but suppressed by fructose, mannose,xylose andarabinose, while all these sugars evoked gigantism.No correlationwas found between cellular division and gigantism,
  3. The photosynthetic activity of giant Chlorella varied withthesorts of sugars added. It was decreased by glucose, fructoseand mannose, but was unaffected by other sugars such as galactose,xylose and arabinose.
  4. The respiratory activity of giant Chlorellacells as much higherthan that of control cells.
  5. The amountsof protein-N and dry weight per unit volume of giantChlorellawere much less than those of control cells.
1 Present address: Department of Chemistry, College of GeneralEducation, Osaka University, Toyonaka, Osaka.  相似文献   

20.
Three polysaccharide fractions (DDP1-1, DDP2-1 and DDP3-1) were successfully purified from the crude polysaccharide of Dendrobium denneanum by DEAE-Cellulose and Sephadex G-200 column chromatography. The average molecular weights (Mws) of these fractions were 51.5, 26.1 and 6.95 kDa, respectively. Monosaccharide components analysis indicated that DDP1-1 and DDP2-1 were composed of arabinose, xylose, mannose, glucose and galactose in a molar ratio of 1.00:2.82:57.11:140.82:7.76 and 1.00:1.62:1.18:77.5:7.79. DDP3-1 was composed of arabinose, mannose, glucose and galactose in a molar ratio of 1.00:1.03:8.84:2.00. On the basis of antioxidant test in vitro, DDP2-1 exhibited the highest antioxidant ability among these samples.  相似文献   

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