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1.
Appearance of cellulose microfibrils in the medium of a suspension of cells of Acetobacter xylinum in buffered glucose solution was preceded by a stage during which the cellulose in the medium was amorphous within the available resolution. The size of the vertical axis of the microfibrils of the bacterial cellulose was found on the basis of measurement of shadow length to be only about 16 A. In good agreement with findings of earlier workers, the size of the lateral axis ("width") of the image of the metal-shadowed cellulose microfibrils was found to be 11 mµ. After correcting for a large part probably contributed by deposited metal in the observed width of the microfibrils, the real width is estimated roughly to be in the neighborhood of 3 mµ. To account for the occurrence of diverse morphological elements in the fields and for the fact that the cellulose fibrils are free entities rather than physical appendages of the cell, it is suggested that individual cellulose molecules are released at the cell surface and diffuse into the medium, wherein they finally enter into crystal-line patterns.  相似文献   

2.
Tensile deformation of bacterial cellulose composites   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The polymeric basis for the mechanical properties of primary plant cell walls has been investigated by forming analogous composites based on fermentation of the bacterium Acetobacter xylinus, either alone or in the presence of xyloglucan or pectin. Simultaneous small-angle X-ray scattering and uniaxial deformation experiments has shown how the cellulose microfibrils reorient during deformation. Despite very different stress/strain curves, the reorientation behaviour is similar, regardless of the presence or absence of xyloglucan or pectin. A simple theory has been developed to predict the orientation behaviour. This is qualitatively similar to the measured behaviour, but differs quantitatively.  相似文献   

3.
The Gram-negative bacterium Acetobacter xylinum assembles a cellulse ribbon composed of a number of microfibrils in the longitudinal axis of its envelope. The zone of ribbon assembly was investigated by freeze-etch electron microscopy. Freeze-etching revealed, beneath the cellulose ribbons, a linear array of pores on the lipopolysaccharide membrane. These pores have a rim diameter of 120--150 A and a central hole or deepening of approximately 35 A. The axes of pore arrays closely coincide with linear arrays of 100 A particles on the E- and P-faces of the fractured lipopolysaccharide membranes. Pores and particles in the lipopolysaccharide membrane are probably congruent. The pores are hypothesized to be the export sites (penetration sites) for cellulose.  相似文献   

4.
Since xyloglucan is believed to bind to cellulose microfibrils in the primary cell walls of higher plants and, when isolated from the walls, can also bind to cellulose in vitro, the binding mechanism of xyloglucan to cellulose was further investigated using radioiodinated pea xyloglucan. A time course for the binding showed that the radioiodinated xyloglucan continued to be bound for at least 4 hours at 40°C. Binding was inhibited above pH 6. Binding capacity was shown to vary for celluloses of different origin and was directly related to the relative surface area of the microfibrils. The binding of xyloglucan to cellulose was very specific and was not affected by the presence of a 10-fold excess of (1→2)-β-glucan, (1→3)-β-glucan, (1→6)-β-glucan, (1→3, 1→4)-β-glucan, arabinogalactan, or pectin. When xyloglucan (0.1%) was added to a cellulose-forming culture of Acetobacter xylinum, cellulose ribbon structure was partially disrupted indicating an association of xyloglucan with cellulose at the time of synthesis. Such a result suggests that the small size of primary wall microfibrils in higher plants may well be due to the binding of xyloglucan to cellulose during synthesis which prevents fasciation of small fibrils into larger bundles. Fluorescent xyloglucan was used to stain pea cell wall ghosts prepared to contain only the native xyloglucan:cellulose network or only cellulose. Ghosts containing only cellulose showed strong fluorescence when prepared before or after elongation; as predicted, the presence of native xyloglucan in the ghosts repressed binding of added fluorescent xyloglucan. Such ghosts, prepared after elongation when the ratio of native xyloglucan:cellulose is substantially reduced, still showed only faint fluorescence, indicating that microfibrils continue to be coated with xyloglucan throughout the growth period.  相似文献   

5.
In vivo cellulose ribbon assembly by the Gram-negative bacterium Acetobacter xylinum can be altered by incubation in carboxymethylcellulose (CMC), a negatively charged water-soluble cellulose derivative, and also by incubation in a variety of neutral, water-soluble cellulose derivatives. In the presence of all of these substituted celluloses, normal fasciation of microfibril bundles to form the typical twisting ribbon is prevented. Alteration of ribbon assembly is most extensive in the presence of CMC, which often induces synthesis of separate, intertwining bundles of microfibrils. Freeze- etch preparations of the bacterial outer membrane suggest that particles that are thought to be associated with cellulose synthesis or extrusion may be specifically organized to mediate synthesis of microfibril bundles. These data support the previous hypothesis that the cellulose ribbon of A. xylinum is formed by a hierarchical, cell- directed, self-assembly process. The relationship of these results to the regulation of cellulose microfibril size and wall extensibility in plant cell walls is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The structure of the pellicles and cells of the cellulose-producing bacteria, Acetobacter xylinum and Acetobacter acetigenus, was studied by transmission electron microscopy of thin sections and freeze-etch replicas of glucose-stimulated cell suspensions, quiescent cell suspensions, and discrete pellicles. These bacteria have a relatively thin cell wall in section, with several irregular features superimposed on an otherwise simple, Gram-negative morphology. There are no flagella or pili. Unfixed, unextracted cells, viewed as whole mounts, show spherical or ellipsoidal bodies of undetermined composition which disappear after extraction with water or ethanol and propylene oxide. For both species, there are several kinds of cell surface irregularities, some of which are localized protrusions of the cell envelope. A variety of irregularities is seen frequently on cells in the first minutes of glucose incubation, on cells in a discrete pellicle, on quiescent cells, and on starved cells. Immediately after the addition of glucose to cellulose-free cells in suspension culture, fine fibrils appear on and (or) near the cell envelope. The fine fibrils are frequently as small as 3 nm in diameter in both freeze-etch and thin-section preparations and are frequently associated with freshly synthesized cellulose fibrils. Starved cells in suspensions free of (classical) microfibrils sometimes reveal stubs of an extracellular structure whose morphology resembles that of a nascent cellulose fibril.  相似文献   

7.
Bacterial cellulose (BC) is a natural hydrogel, which is produced by Acetobacter xylinum (recently renamed Gluconacetobacter xylinum) in culture and constitutes of a three-dimensional network of ribbon-shaped bundles of cellulose microfibrils. Here, a two-step purification process is presented that significantly improves the structural, mechanical, thermal and morphological behaviour of BC sheet processed from these hydrogels produced in static culture. Alkalisation of BC using a single-step treatment of 2.5 wt.% NaOH solution produced a twofold increase in Young's modulus of processed BC sheet over untreated BC sheet. Further enhancements are achieved after a second treatment with 2.5 wt.% NaOCl (bleaching). These treatments were carefully designed in order to prevent any polymorphic crystal transformation from cellulose I to cellulose II, which can be detrimental for the mechanical properties. Scanning electron microscopy and thermogravimetric analysis reveals that with increasing chemical treatment, morphological and thermal stability of the processed films are also improved.  相似文献   

8.
I M Saxena  K Kudlicka  K Okuda    R M Brown  Jr 《Journal of bacteriology》1994,176(18):5735-5752
The synthesis of an extracellular ribbon of cellulose in the bacterium Acetobacter xylinum takes place from linearly arranged, membrane-localized, cellulose-synthesizing and extrusion complexes that direct the coupled steps of polymerization and crystallization. To identify the different components involved in this process, we isolated an Acetobacter cellulose-synthesizing (acs) operon from this bacterium. Analysis of DNA sequence shows the presence of three genes in the acs operon, in which the first gene (acsAB) codes for a polypeptide with a molecular mass of 168 kDa, which was identified as the cellulose synthase. A single base change in the previously reported DNA sequence of this gene, resulting in a frameshift and synthesis of a larger protein, is described in the present paper, along with the sequences of the other two genes (acsC and acsD). The requirement of the acs operon genes for cellulose production was determined using site-determined TnphoA/Kanr GenBlock insertion mutants. Mutant analysis showed that while the acsAB and acsC genes were essential for cellulose production in vivo, the acsD mutant produced reduced amounts of two cellulose allomorphs (cellulose I and cellulose II), suggesting that the acsD gene is involved in cellulose crystallization. The role of the acs operon genes in determining the linear array of intramembranous particles, which are believed to be sites of cellulose synthesis, was investigated for the different mutants; however, this arrangement was observed only in cells that actively produced cellulose microfibrils, suggesting that it may be influenced by the crystallization of the nascent glucan chains.  相似文献   

9.
Complete cellulase, an endoglucanase (EGV) with cellulose-binding domain (CBD) and a mutant endoglucanase without CBD (EGI) were utilized for the hydrolysis of a fully bleached reed Kraft pulp sample. The changes of microfibrils on the fiber surface were examined with tapping mode atomic force microscopy (TM–AFM) phase imaging. The results indicated that complete cellulase could either peel the fibrillar bundles along the microfibrils (peeling) or cut microfibrils into short length across the length direction (cutting) during the process. After 24 h treatment, most orientated microfibrils on the cellulose fiber surface were degraded into fragments by the complete cellulase. Incubation with endoglucanase (EGV or EGI) also caused peeling action. But no significant size reduction of microfibrils length was observed, which was probably due to the absence of cellobiohydrolase. The AFM phase imaging clearly revealed that individual EGV particles were adsorbed onto the surface of a cellulose fiber and may be bound to several microfibrils.  相似文献   

10.
J. Ross Colvin 《Planta》1980,149(2):97-107
The mechanism of formation of cellulose-like microfibrils by a non-soluble, particulate enzyme and uridine diphosphoglucose (UDPG) in a cell-free system from Acetobacter xylinum was studied by transmission electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction. The suspension of particles to which the enzyme is adsorbed is composed of whole, dense ovoids, 50–250 nm long when wet, of fragments of the ovoids, and amorphous substance. There is a typical unit membrane around each ovoid but initially there is no trace of fibrillar material in the suspension. When the suspension of particles is incubated with UDPG, linear wisps of fibrils are produced which associate rapidly to form longer and wider threads, especially in 0.01 M NaCl. There is no visible attachment of the wisps to the particles. After 20 min incubation, threads with the typical morphology of cellulose microfibrils are formed that later tend to become entangled in clumps. The microfibrils are insoluble in hot, aqueous, alkaline solutions and resistant to the action of trypsin, but may be degraded by glusulase. After treatment with 1 M NaOH at 100° C or with cold 18% NaOH they show an X-ray diffraction pattern which resembles that of Cellulose II from mercerized, authentic bacterial cellulose. Incorporation of radioactive glucose into the insoluble residue is enhanced by drying of the cellulose microfibrils before alkaline digestion and especially by the addition of a gross excess of carrier cellulose after incubation. In this system there is no evidence for participation of linear, axial, synthesizing sites on the cell wall of the bacterium or for ordered, organized granules in the assembly of the microfibrils. That is, cellulose-like microfibrils may be formed in a cell-free system without the action of any of the previously suggested cell organelles. In addition, these observations are consistent with a previously described notion of a transient, hydrated, nascent, bacterial cellulose microfibril. The possibility that cellulose microfibrils of green plants may be formed in the same way is considered.N.R.C.C. 18314  相似文献   

11.
Summary The marine red algaErythrocladia subintegra synthesizes cellulose microfibrils as determined by CBH I-gold labelling, X-ray and electron diffraction analyses. The cellulose microfibrils are quite thin, ribbon-like structures, 1–1.5 nm in thickness (constant), and 10–33 nm in width (variable). Several laterally associated minicrystal components contribute to the variation in microfibrillar width. Electron diffraction analysis suggested a uniplanar orientation of the microfibrils with their (101) lattice planes parallel to the plasma membrane surface of the cell. The linear particle arrays bound in the plasma membrane and associated with microfibril impressions recently demonstrated inErythrocladia have been shown in this study to be the cellulose-synthesizing terminal complexes (TCs). The TCs appear to be organized by a repetition of transverse rows consisting of four TC subunits, rather than by four rows of longitudinallyarranged TC subunits. The number of transverse rows varied between 8–26, corresponding with variation in the length of the TCs and the width of the microfibrils. The spacings between the neighboring transverse rows are almost constant being 10.5–11.5 nm. Based on the knowledge thatAcetobacter, Vaucheria, andErythrocladia synthesize similar thin, ribbon-like cellulose microfibrils, the structural characteristics common to the organization of distinctive TCs occurring in these three organisms has been discussed, so that the mode of cellulose microfibril assembly patterns may be deciphered.  相似文献   

12.
This paper describes the first successful application of the novel technique of X-ray microbeam diffraction to the study of wood cell walls in developing xylem tissue. The method enabled us to obtain quantitative diffraction diagrams from single cell walls. It was further combined with selected area electron diffraction. We find that the crystal size of cellulose is increasing from the primary wall (P, <19 A) over the outer layer (S(1), 19 A) to the middle layer of the secondary wall (S(2), 24 A). In particular, the cellulose crystals formed in the primary wall consist of an extremely low-crystalline state of cellulose I. We suggest the more applicable concept of microfibrils with increasing lateral disorder, similar to cellulose IV(I).  相似文献   

13.
An extended enzymatic hydrolysis of cotton fibers by crude cellulase from Trichoderma pseudokoningii S-38 is described with characterization of both the enzyme changes of activities and cellulose structure. The hydrolysis rates declined drastically during the early stage and then slowly and steadily throughout the whole hydrolysis process the same trend could be seen during the following re-hydrolysis process. Morphological and structural changes to the fibers, such as swelling, frequent surface erosion, and variation in the packing and orientation of microfibrils, were investigated by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Observation of X-ray diffraction and IR spectra suggests that the hydrolysis process results in a gradual increase in the relative intensity of the hydrogen bond network, and a gradual decrease in the apparent crystal size of cellulose. The I(alpha) crystal phase was hydrolyzed more easily than was the I(beta) crystal phase. Apart from the inactivation of CBHs activity, changes in the packing and arrangement of microfibrils and the structural heterogeneity of cellulose during hydrolysis could be responsible for the reduction in the rate of reaction, especially in its later stages. The results indicate that the enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose occurs on the outer layer of the fiber surface and that, following this, the process continues in a sub-layer manner.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Calcofluor White ST is a fluorescent brightener that has previously been shown to alter cellulose ribbon assembly in the bacteriumAcetobacter xylinum. In this report, we demonstrate that Calcofluor also disrupts cell wall assembly in the eukaryotic algaOocystis apiculata. When observed with polarization microscopy, walls altered by Calcofluor show reduced birefringence relative to controls. Electron microscopy has shown that these altered walls contain regions which consist primarily of amorphous material and which generally lack organized microfibrils. We propose that wall alteration occurs because Calcofluor binds with the glucan chains polymerized by the cellulose synthesizing enzymes as they are produced. As a consequence, the glucan chains are prevented from co-crystallizing to form microfibrils. Synthesis of normal walls resumes when Calcofluor is removed, which is consistent with our proposal that Calcofluor acts by direct physical interaction with newly synthesized wall components.Several types of fluorescent patterns at the cell wall/plasmalemma interface have also been observed following Calcofluor treatment. Fluorescent spots, striations; helical bands, and lens-shaped thickenings have been documented. Each of these patterns may be the result of the interaction of Calcofluor with cellulose at different spatial or temporal levels or from varying concentrations of the brightener itself. Helical bands and lens-shaped thickenings also have been examined with the electron microscope. Like other regions of wall alteration, they are found to contain primarily amorphous material. Finally, we note that cells with severely disrupted walls are unable to complete their normal life cycle.  相似文献   

15.
不同培养方式对细菌纤维素产量和结构性质的影响   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
考察了自行筛选的Acetobacter xylinum NUST4.2在静置培养和发酵罐培养获得的细菌纤维素(BC)的产量、基本结构和性能的差异。结果表明:静置培养时产纤维素7.5g/L,产率为0.052g/L/h,在机械搅拌发酵罐中培养3d产量达3.13g/L,产率达0.043g/L/h;SEM分析显示静置培养和发酵罐培养得到的纤维素均具有网状结构,但静置获得的纤维素丝带相互缠绕且层状重叠,更加致密,丝带更细;FT-IR分析知搅拌不改变纤维素的化学结构,但能减弱分子间氢键,和XRD结合分析可知静置培养的纤维素具有更高结晶指数,更高Iα含量和更大晶粒尺寸,但不改变晶型,仍为纤维素I型,说明搅拌会干扰纤维素初始纤丝的结晶,有利于形成更小的晶粒和较Iα稳定的Iβ。与棉纤维素相比,静置培养获得的纤维素的热稳定性更好,而发酵罐培养获得的纤维素则阻燃性更好。  相似文献   

16.
The crystalline ultrastructure and orientation of cellulose microfibrils in the cell wall of Valonia macrophysa were investigated by means of high-resolution electron microscopy of ultrathin (approx. 28 nm) sections. With careful selection of imaging conditions, ultrastructural aspects of the cell wall that had remained unresolved in previous studies were worked out by direct imaging of crystal lattice of cellulose microfibrils. It was confirmed that each microfibril is a single crystal having a lateral dimension of 20·20 nm2, because lattice images of 0.39 nm resolution were clearly recorded with no major disruption in the whole area of the cross section of the microfibril. There was no evidence for the existence of 3.5-nm elementary fibrils which have been considered to be basic crystallographic and morphological units of cellulose in general. It was also confirmed that the axial directions (crystallographic fiber direction) of adjacent microfibrils in each single lamella of the cell wall are opposite to each other.  相似文献   

17.
Park YB  Cosgrove DJ 《Plant physiology》2012,158(4):1933-1943
Xyloglucan is widely believed to function as a tether between cellulose microfibrils in the primary cell wall, limiting cell enlargement by restricting the ability of microfibrils to separate laterally. To test the biomechanical predictions of this "tethered network" model, we assessed the ability of cucumber (Cucumis sativus) hypocotyl walls to undergo creep (long-term, irreversible extension) in response to three family-12 endo-β-1,4-glucanases that can specifically hydrolyze xyloglucan, cellulose, or both. Xyloglucan-specific endoglucanase (XEG from Aspergillus aculeatus) failed to induce cell wall creep, whereas an endoglucanase that hydrolyzes both xyloglucan and cellulose (Cel12A from Hypocrea jecorina) induced a high creep rate. A cellulose-specific endoglucanase (CEG from Aspergillus niger) did not cause cell wall creep, either by itself or in combination with XEG. Tests with additional enzymes, including a family-5 endoglucanase, confirmed the conclusion that to cause creep, endoglucanases must cut both xyloglucan and cellulose. Similar results were obtained with measurements of elastic and plastic compliance. Both XEG and Cel12A hydrolyzed xyloglucan in intact walls, but Cel12A could hydrolyze a minor xyloglucan compartment recalcitrant to XEG digestion. Xyloglucan involvement in these enzyme responses was confirmed by experiments with Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) hypocotyls, where Cel12A induced creep in wild-type but not in xyloglucan-deficient (xxt1/xxt2) walls. Our results are incompatible with the common depiction of xyloglucan as a load-bearing tether spanning the 20- to 40-nm spacing between cellulose microfibrils, but they do implicate a minor xyloglucan component in wall mechanics. The structurally important xyloglucan may be located in limited regions of tight contact between microfibrils.  相似文献   

18.
In numerous plant cell walls, the cellulose microfibrils are arranged in a helicoidal pattern which has been considered as an analog to a cholesteric order. Here, we report on the spontaneous helicoidal organization which occurs in acellular conditions from aqueous suspensions of cellulose. The cellulosic mucilage of mature seeds of quince (Cydonia oblonga L) was studied both in situ (pre-release mucilage) and after water extraction and in in vitro re-assembly (prolonged high speed ultracentrifugation, further progressive dehydration and embedding in LR White methacrylate or hydrosoluble melamine resin). The cellulosic component was characterized by the use of cellobiohydrolase (CBH1) bound to colloidal gold, and the glucuronic acid residues of the xylan matrix were characterized by the use of cationised gold. Inside the seeds, the pre-release mucilage is mostly helicoidal, with the occurrence of more or less ordered domains, which indicate a fluid organization relevant to an actual liquid crystal state. Cytochemical tests revealed the tight association between cellulose and glucuronoxylans, the latter constituting a charged coat around each microfibril. Following the hydration of the seed, a cellulosic suspension was extracted in which microfibrils were totally dispersed. The progressive dehydration of the suspension gave rise to concentrated viscous drops. Ultrastructural observations revealed the occurrence of multidomain organization, from non-ordered to cholesteric-like regions, revealing that the mucilage is at the same time crystalline and liquid. This constitutes the first demonstration that liquid crystal type assemblies can arise from crystalline and biological cellulose in aqueous suspension. It strengthens the hypothesis that a transient liquid crystal state must occur during the cellulose ordering. The possible morphogenetic role of the glucuronoxylans in the cholesteric organization of the cellulose is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The addition of soluble cellodextrins of increasing size to a cell envelope preparation of Acetobacter xylinum stimulated cellulose synthesis from UDPG. This stimulation was attributed to both acceptor and activator effects. Enzymes required for cellulose synthesis were found to be heat-unstable and those required for synthesis of glycosylated lipid components from UDPG, heat-stable. Both heat-inactivated envelope fragments and supernatant fluid from whole cells were necessary for cellulose synthesis from UDPG. Cellulose was not formed from UDPG in the presence of either supernatant fluid alone or heat-inactivated envelopes alone.The combined results of this and previous studies suggest that either the cell envelope is necessary for synthesis of a more immediate precursor to cellulose than UDPG, or that the synthesis from UDPG requires a matrix. The former suggestion and its possible link with lipid intermediate involvement was strengthened by the observation of inefficient glycoxylated lipid formation by a celluloseless mutant strain of A. xylinum. The possible locations of various enzyme activities required for the synthesis of the cellulose precursor are indicated and a possible microfibril nucleation process is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
An ORF2 gene located upstream of the cellulose synthase (bcs) operon of Acetobacter xylinum BPR2001 was disrupted and a mutant (M2-2) was constructed. In static cultivation, the parent strain produced a tough, colorless, and insoluble cellulose pellicle, whereas M2-2 culture produced a thin, yellow, and fragile pellicle. The results of X-ray diffraction and 13C solid-state NMR indicated that the product of M2-2 is a mixture of cellulose I, cellulose II, and amorphous cellulose. The cellulose I to cellulose II ratio of the mixture was evaluated from the signal areas of C6 to be about 1:2. Electron microscopy revealed that the product of M2-2 included ribbon-like cellulose and irregularly shaped particles attached to the ribbons. On the other hand, the mutant complemented with plasmid pSA-ORF2/k containing the ORF2 gene and BPR2001 produced only cellulose I. These results indicate that the ORF2 gene is involved in the production and crystallization of cellulose I microfibrils by this microorganism.  相似文献   

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