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1.
The metabolism of myo-inositol-2-14C, d-glucuronate-1-14C, d-glucuronate-6-14C, and l-methionine-methyl-14C to cell wall polysaccharides was investigated in excised root-tips of 3 day old Zea mays seedlings. From myo-inositol, about one-half of incorporated label was recovered in ethanol insoluble residues. Of this label, about 90% was solubilized by treatment, first with a preparation of pectinase-EDTA, then with dilute hydrochloric acid. The only labeled constituents in these hydrolyzates were d-galacturonic acid, d-glucuronic acid, 4-O-methyl-d-glucuronic acid, d-xylose, and l-arabinose, or larger oligosaccharide fragments containing these units. Medium external to excised root-tips grown under sterile conditions in myo-inositol-2-14C contained labeled polysaccharide.  相似文献   

2.
myo-Inositol-linked glucogenesis in germinated lily (Lilium longiflorum Thunb., cv. Ace) pollen was investigated by studying the effects of added l-arabinose or d-xylose on metabolism of myo-[2-3H]inositol and by determining the distribution of radioisotope in pentosyl and hexosyl residues of polysaccharides from pollen labeled with myo-[2-14C]inositol, myo-[2-3H]inositol, l-[5-14C]arabinose, and d-[5R,5S-3H]xylose.  相似文献   

3.
Addition of myo-inositol to pentaerythritol-based germination media repressed the conversion of d-[1-14C]glucose to labeled uronosyl and pentosyl units of tube wall pectic substance in lily pollen (Lilium longiflorum Thunb.). Conversion of d-[1-14C]glucose to labeled glucosyl, galactosyl, and rhamnosyl units was unaffected. The reverse experiment, addition of d-glucose to pentaerythritol-based media, failed to affect the conversion of myo-[2-3H]inositol to uronosyl and pentosyl units although the flow of label into products of myo-inositol-linked glucogenesis was blocked. Results of these experiments are discussed in terms of a functional myo-inositol oxidation pathway.  相似文献   

4.
myo-Inositol-1-phosphatase has been purified to homogeneity from Lilium longiflorum pollen using an alternative procedure which includes pH change and phenyl Sepharose column chromatography. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analysis shows that the enzyme is a dimer (subunit molecular weight, 29,000 daltons). The enzyme is stable at low pH values and is inactivated only below pH 3.0. In addition to 1l-and 1d-myo-inositol-1-phosphate, it shows high specificity for 1l-chiro-inositol-3-phosphate. As observed earlier with other primary phosphate esters, d-glucitol-6-phosphate and d-mannitol-6-phosphate are hydrolyzed very slowly. No activity is observed with inorganic pyrophosphate or myo-inositol pentaphosphate as substrate. The enzyme is inhibited by fluoride, sulfate, molybdate, and thiol-directed reagents. Partial protection against N-ethylmaleimide inhibition by substrate and Mg2+ together suggests sulfhydryl involvement at the active site.  相似文献   

5.
The myo-inositol oxidation pathway was investigated in regard to its role as a source of carbon for products of hexose monophosphate metabolism in germinated pollen of Lilium longiflorum Thunb., cv. Ace. myo-[2-14]Inositol and d-[1-14C]glucuronate had similar distributions of radioactivity, contributing about three times more label to polysaccharide-bound glucose than myo-[2-3H]inositol. In the course of glucogenesis label from the latter appeared as tritiated water in the medium. This exchange could be enhanced by supplying d-[5R,5S-3H]xylose instead of myo-[2-3H]inositol. When the former was administered, [3H]glucose was the only labeled sugar residue found in polysaccharide products. The soluble constituents of d-[5R,5S-3H]xylose-labeled pollen contained no traces of labeled xylose despite massive uptake and utilization.  相似文献   

6.
Saito K  Nick JA  Loewus FA 《Plant physiology》1990,94(3):1496-1500
d-[6-14C]Glucosone that had been prepared enzymically from d-[6-14C]glucose was used to compare relative efficiencies of these two sugars for l-ascorbic acid (AA) biosynthesis in detached bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L., cv California small white) apices and 4-week-old spinach (Spinacia oleracea L., cv Giant Noble) leaves. At tracer concentration, 14C from glucosone was utilized by spinach leaves for AA biosynthesis much more effectively than glucose. Carbon-14 from [6-14C]glucose underwent considerable redistribution during AA formation, whereas 14C from [6-14C]glucosone remained almost totally in carbon 6 of AA. In other experiments with spinach leaves, l-[U-14C]sorbosone was found to be equivalent to [6-14C]glucose as a source of 14C for AA. In the presence of 0.1% d-glucosone, conversion of [6-14C] glucose into labeled AA was greatly repressed. In a comparable experiment with l-sorbosone replacing d-glucosone, the effect was much less. The experiments described here give substance to the proposal that d-glucosone and l-sorbosone are putative intermediates in the conversion of d-glucose to AA in higher plants.  相似文献   

7.
Incubation of mature sweet corn kernels of Zea mays in dilute solutions of 14C-labeled indole-3-acetic acid leads to the formation of 14C-labeled esters of myo-inositol, glucose, and glucans. Utilizing this knowledge it was found that an enzyme preparation from immature sweet corn kernels of Zea mays catalyzed the CoA- and ATP-dependent esterification of indole-3-acetic acid to myo-inositol and glucose. The esters formed were 2-O-(indole-3-acetyl)-myo-inositol, 1-dl-1-O-(indole-3-acetyl)-myo-inositol, di-O-(indole-3-acetyl)-myo-inositol, tri-O-(indole-3-acetyl)-myo-inositol, 2-O-(indole-3-acetyl)-d-glucopyranose, 4-O-(indole-3-acetyl)-d-glucopyranose and 6-O-(indole-3-acetyl)-d-glycopyranose. An assay system was developed for measuring esterification of 14C-labeled indole-3-acetic acid by ammonolysis of the esters followed by isolation and counting the radioactive indole-3-acetamide.  相似文献   

8.
Conversion of d-[5-3H,6-14C]glucose to l-ascorbic acid in detached apices of Pelargonium crispum (L.) L'Hér cv Prince Rupert (lemon geranium) was accompanied by complete loss of tritium in the product. Chemical degradation of d-glucose which was recovered from the labeled apices yielded d-glyceric acid (corresponding to carbons 4, 5, and 6 of glucose) with a 3H:14C ratio of 4 to be compared with 9, the ratio in d-[5-3H,6-14C]glucose initially. Conversion of d-[6-3H,6-14C]glucose in the same tissue was accompanied by retention of tritium in l-ascorbic acid with a 3H:14C ratio comparable to that of compounds from the hexose pool. Results indicate that during l-ascorbic acid biosynthesis from glucose in Pelargonium crispum hydrogen at carbon 5 undergoes exchange with the medium, suggesting an epimerization at this carbon atom.  相似文献   

9.
Keller F 《Plant physiology》1992,99(3):1251-1253
Galactinol synthase (GS, UDP-α-d-galactose:1l-myo-inositol-1-O- α-d-galactopyranosyltransferase) is a key enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway of the raffinose family of oligosaccharides. The subcellular location of GS was studied in the parenchyma of stachyose-storing tubers of Japanese artichoke (Stachys sieboldii) by isolation of protoplasts and vacuoles. A comparison of the activities of GS, malate dehydrogenase, and alcohol dehydrogenase (extravacuolar markers) and α-mannosidase and β-N-acetylglucosaminidase (vacuolar markers) in parenchyma protoplasts with those of vacuoles isolated from them showed that GS was an extravacuolar enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
The product of myo-inositol-1-phosphate synthase, EC 5.5.1.4, from mature pollen of Lilium longiflorum Thunb., cv Ace (Easter lily) and that of myo-inositol kinase, EC 2.7.1.64, from wheat germ has been identified as 1l-myo-inositol-1-phosphate by gas chromatography of its trimethylsilyl-methyl phosphate derivative on a glass capillary column bearing a chiral phase.  相似文献   

11.
A Mg2+-dependent, alkaline phosphatase has been isolated from mature pollen of Lilium longiflorum Thunb., cv. Ace and partially purified. It hydrolyzes 1l- and 1d-myo-inositol 1-phosphate, myo-inositol 2-phosphate, and β-glycerophosphate at rates decreasing in the order named. The affinity of the enzyme for 1l- and 1d-myo-inositol 1-phosphate is approximately 10-fold greater than its affinity for myo-inositol 2-phosphate. Little or no activity is found with phytate, d-glucose 6-phosphate, d-glucose 1-phosphate, d-fructose 1-phosphate, d-fructose 6-phosphate, d-mannose 6-phosphate, or p-nitrophenyl phosphate. 3-Phosphosphoglycerate is a weak competitive inhibitor. myo-Inositol does not inhibit the reaction. Optimal activity is obtained at pH 8.5 and requires the presence of Mg2+. At 4 millimolar, Co2+, Fe2+ or Mn2+ are less effective. Substantial inhibition is obtained with 0.25 molar Li+. With β-glycerophosphate as substrate the Km is 0.06 millimolar and the reaction remains linear at least 2 hours. In 0.1 molar Tris, β-glycerophosphate yields equivalent amounts of glycerol and inorganic phosphate, evidence that transphosphorylation does not occur.  相似文献   

12.
The metabolic fate of l-[4-14C]ascorbic acid has been examined in the grape (Vitis labrusca L.) and lemon geranium (Pelargonium crispum L. L'Hér. cv. Prince Rupert) under conditions comparable to data from l-[1-14C]ascorbic acid and l-[6-14C]ascorbic acid experiments. In detached grape leaves and immature berries, l-[4-14C]ascorbic acid and l-[1-14C]ascorbic acid were equivalent precursors to carboxyl labeled (+)-tartaric acid. In geranium apices, l-[4-14C]ascorbic acid yielded internal labeled (+)-tartaric acid while l-[6-14C]ascorbic acid gave an equivalent conversion to carboxyl labeled (+)-tartaric acid. These findings clearly show that two distinct processes for the synthesis of (+)-tartaric acid from l-ascorbic acid exist in plants identified as (+)-tartaric acid accumulators. In grape leaves and immature berries, (+)-tartaric acid synthesis proceeds via preservation of a four-carbon fragment derived from carbons 1 through 4 of l-ascorbic acid while carbons 3 through 6 yield (+)-tartaric acid in geranium apices.  相似文献   

13.
The structure of phosphatidylinositol in barley (Hordeum vulgare) aleurone layers was investigated by chemical degradation. In vivo myo-[2-3H]inositol-labeled phosphatidylinositol was first converted to glycerophosphoinositol and, subsequently, after removal of the glycerol moiety, to inositol monophosphate. Here, we present data that show that, in addition to the commonly occurring 1,2-diacylglycero-3-(d-myo-inositol-1-phosphate), barley aleurone cells contain a novel second isomer of phosphatidylinositol that differs in structure of the head group.  相似文献   

14.
Particulate preparations from Phaseolus aureus produce a d-mannosyl-lipid when treated with GDP-d-mannose. This lipid complex appears to be an active d-mannose donor, and some investigators have proposed that its role might be an obligatory intermediate in mannan synthesis of higher plants. When the partially purified d-mannosyl-lipids, isotopically labeled in the d-mannose moiety, were treated with particulate enzymes under a variety of conditions, a negligible amount of material was produced that behaved as a polysaccharide. Endogenous, particle-bound d-mannosyl-14C-lipid prepared from P. aureus particles readily transferred d-mannose to GDP to yield GDP-d-mannose and was hydrolyzed to free d-mannose when treated briefly with 0.01 n HCl at 100 C. The d-mannosyl-lipid, therefore, exhibits active d-mannose transfer potential in its endogenous state. When endogenous glycosyl-lipid was incubated in the absence of GDP-d-mannose-14C, little or no polysaccharide was produced. It was, instead, slowly degraded to d-mannose. Addition of several different unlabeled sugar nucleotides had no effect on the results. Our studies to date, therefore, offer no evidence that the mannosyl-lipid is an obligatory precursor of polysaccharide.  相似文献   

15.
Several weakly transported sugars were tested for transport by the Na+-dependent sugar carrier with slices of everted hamster intestinal tissue. Sugars were assumed to be transported by this carrier if the accumulation was diminished in the absence of Na+ and in the presence of the competitive inhibitor 1,5-anhydro-d-glucitol. The extent of accumulation was correlated with the number of hydroxyl groups in the d-gluco configuration if the ring oxygen was placed in the normal d-glucose position. 5-Thio-d-glucose, with a sulphur atom in the ring, was transported at about the same rate as d-glucose and had a similar Ki for d-galactose transport, but myoinositol was poorly accumulated. It is suggested that there is no hydrogen bonding at the ring oxygen atom, but that the oxygen atom is found at this position as a result of steric constraints. No sugar without a hydroxyl group in the d-gluco position at C-2 of the sugar, including d-mannose, 2-deoxy-d-glucose, 2-chloro-2-deoxy-d-glucose and 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-d-glucose, was transported by the Na+-dependent carrier, but these sugars and l-fucose weakly and competitively inhibit the Na+-dependent accumulation of l-glucose into slices of everted hamster intestinal tissue. It is concluded that the bond between the carrier and C-2 of the sugar may be covalent, and a possible mechanism for active intestinal transport is proposed.  相似文献   

16.
Chisholm MD  Wetter LR 《Plant physiology》1967,42(12):1726-1730
The incorporation of the radioactivity from acetate-1-14C, acetate-2-14C, dl-methionine-1-14C, dl-methionine-2-14C, dl-methionine-3,4-14C, dl-homomethionine-2-14C, dl-allyl-glycine-2-14C, and dl-2-amino-5-hydroxyvalerate-2-14C into the aglycones of progoitrin, gluconapin, and glucobrassicanapin of maturing rape plants (Brassica campestris L.) was investigated. Radioactivity from dl-methionine-2-14C, dl-methionine-3,4-14C, dl-homomethionine-2-14C, and acetate-2-14C were incorporated into the 3 major thioglucosides. The other organic compounds were poorly incorporated except for dl-allylglycine-2-14C into glucobrassicanapin. The results obtained suggest that the rape plant can synthesize amino acids by the condensation of acetate (as acetyl CoA) to α-keto acids to yield a homologue of the original amino acid. These newly formed amino acids are then employed to synthesize the 3 major thioglucosides.  相似文献   

17.
Pea (Pisum sativum) leaf discs or swimming suspensions of Chlamydomonas eugametos were radiolabeled with [3H]myo-inositol or [32P]Pi and the lipids were extracted, deacylated, and their glycerol moieties removed. The resulting inositol trisphosphate and bisphosphate fractions were examined by periodate degradation, reduction and dephosphorylation, or by incubation with human red cell membranes. Their likely structures were identified as d-myo-inositol(1,4,5)trisphosphate and d-myo-inositol(1,4,)-bisphosphate. It is concluded that plants contain phosphatidylinositol(4)phosphate and phosphatidylinositol(4,5)bisphosphate; no other polyphosphoinositides were detected.  相似文献   

18.
The glycolate/glycerate transporter of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) chloroplast inner envelope membranes was solubilized by treatment of the membranes with sodium cholate. Mixtures of the cholate extracts and soy asolectin were subjected to gel filtration to remove the detergent. The reconstituted vesicles were frozen, thawed, and sonicated in a buffer that contained 10 millimolar d-glycerate and, usually, [3H]sucrose as an internal space indicator. The dilution of the vesicles into a medium that contained 0.4 millimolar [14C]d-glycerate resulted in a rapid accumulation of labeled glycerate, followed by a much slower loss of [14C]d-glycerate from the vesicles. This behavior is characteristic of counterflow. The accumulation of [14C]d-glycerate was strongly inhibited by HgCl2, which blocks glycolate/glycerate transport in intact chloroplasts. In the absence of proton ionophores, the extent of [14C]glycolate accumulation under similar conditions was much greater than that of [14C]d-glycerate. External glycolate inhibited d-glycerate counterflow and external d-glycerate inhibited glycolate counterflow. The external pH dependence of the efflux of [14C]d-glycerate accumulated in vesicles by counterflow and its inhibition by external l-mandelate are characteristics displayed by glycolate transport in intact chloroplasts. Partial purification of the transporter was achieved by glycerol gradient centrifugation. The solubilized glycolate and glycerate counterflow activities, assayed by reconstitution into vesicles, were found to sediment similarly.  相似文献   

19.
Peptidoglycan hydrolases (PGHs) are responsible for bacterial cell lysis. Most PGHs have a modular structure comprising a catalytic domain and a cell wall-binding domain (CWBD). PGHs of bacteriophage origin, called endolysins, are involved in bacterial lysis at the end of the infection cycle. We have characterized two endolysins, Lc-Lys and Lc-Lys-2, identified in prophages present in the genome of Lactobacillus casei BL23. These two enzymes have different catalytic domains but similar putative C-terminal CWBDs. By analyzing purified peptidoglycan (PG) degradation products, we showed that Lc-Lys is an N-acetylmuramoyl-l-alanine amidase, whereas Lc-Lys-2 is a γ-d-glutamyl-l-lysyl endopeptidase. Remarkably, both lysins were able to lyse only Gram-positive bacterial strains that possess PG with d-Ala4d-Asx-l-Lys3 in their cross-bridge, such as Lactococcus casei, Lactococcus lactis, and Enterococcus faecium. By testing a panel of L. lactis cell wall mutants, we observed that Lc-Lys and Lc-Lys-2 were not able to lyse mutants with a modified PG cross-bridge, constituting d-Ala4l-Ala-(l-Ala/l-Ser)-l-Lys3; moreover, they do not lyse the L. lactis mutant containing only the nonamidated d-Asp cross-bridge, i.e. d-Ala4d-Asp-l-Lys3. In contrast, Lc-Lys could lyse the ampicillin-resistant E. faecium mutant with 3→3 l-Lys3-d-Asn-l-Lys3 bridges replacing the wild-type 4→3 d-Ala4-d-Asn-l-Lys3 bridges. We showed that the C-terminal CWBD of Lc-Lys binds PG containing mainly d-Asn but not PG with only the nonamidated d-Asp-containing cross-bridge, indicating that the CWBD confers to Lc-Lys its narrow specificity. In conclusion, the CWBD characterized in this study is a novel type of PG-binding domain targeting specifically the d-Asn interpeptide bridge of PG.  相似文献   

20.
Thermotoga maritima is a Gram-negative, hyperthermophilic bacterium whose peptidoglycan contains comparable amounts of l- and d-lysine. We have determined the fine structure of this cell-wall polymer. The muropeptides resulting from the digestion of peptidoglycan by mutanolysin were separated by high-performance liquid chromatography and identified by amino acid analysis after acid hydrolysis, dinitrophenylation, enzymatic determination of the configuration of the chiral amino acids, and mass spectrometry. The high-performance liquid chromatography profile contained four main peaks, two monomers, and two dimers, plus a few minor peaks corresponding to anhydro forms. The first monomer was the d-lysine-containing disaccharide-tripeptide in which the d-Glu-d-Lys bond had the unusual γ→ϵ arrangement (GlcNAc-MurNAc-l-Ala-γ-d-Glu-ϵ-d-Lys). The second monomer was the conventional disaccharide-tetrapeptide (GlcNAc-MurNAc-l-Ala-γ-d-Glu-l-Lys-d-Ala). The first dimer contained a disaccharide-l-Ala as the acyl donor cross-linked to the α-amine of d-Lys in a tripeptide acceptor stem with the sequence of the first monomer. In the second dimer, donor and acceptor stems with the sequences of the second and first monomers, respectively, were connected by a d-Ala4-α-d-Lys3 cross-link. The cross-linking index was 10 with an average chain length of 30 disaccharide units. The structure of the peptidoglycan of T. maritima revealed for the first time the key role of d-Lys in peptidoglycan synthesis, both as a surrogate of l-Lys or meso-diaminopimelic acid at the third position of peptide stems and in the formation of novel cross-links of the l-Ala1(α→α)d-Lys3 and d-Ala4(α→α)d-Lys3 types.Peptidoglycan (or murein) is a giant macromolecule whose main function is the protection of the cytoplasmic membrane against the internal osmotic pressure. It is composed of alternating residues of N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc)2 cross-linked by short peptides (1). The composition of the peptide stem in nascent peptidoglycan is l-Ala1-γ-d-Glu2-X3-d-Ala4-d-Ala5, where X is most often meso-diaminopimelic acid (meso-A2pm) or l-lysine in Gram-negative and Gram-positive species, respectively (2, 3). In the mature macromolecule, the last d-Ala residue is removed. Cross-linking of the glycan chains generally occurs between the carboxyl group of d-Ala at position 4 of a donor peptide stem and the side-chain amino group of the diamino acid at position 3 of an acceptor peptide stem (4→3 cross-links). Cross-linking is either direct or through a short peptide bridge such as pentaglycine in Staphylococcus aureus (2, 3). The enzymes for the formation of the 4→3 cross-links are active-site serine dd- transpeptidases that belong to the penicillin-binding protein (PBP) family and are the essential targets of β-lactam antibiotics in pathogenic bacteria (4). Catalysis involves the cleavage of the d-Ala4-d-Ala5 bond of a donor peptide stem and the formation of an amide bond between the carboxyl of d-Ala4 and the side chain amine at the third position of an acceptor stem. Transpeptidases of the ld specificity are active-site cysteine enzymes that were shown to act as surrogates of the PBPs in mutants of Enterococcus faecium resistant to β-lactam antibiotics (5). They cleave the X3-d-Ala4 bond of a donor stem peptide to form 3→3 cross-links. This alternate mode of cross-linking is usually marginal, although it has recently been shown to predominate in non-replicative “dormant” forms of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (6).Thermotoga maritima is a Gram-negative, extremely thermophilic bacterium isolated from geothermally heated sea floors by Huber et al. (7). A morphological characteristic is the presence of an outer sheath-like envelope called “toga.” Although the organism has received considerable attention for its biotechnological potential, studies about its peptidoglycan are scarce (811), and in particular the fine structure of the macromolecule is still unknown. In their initial work, Huber et al. (7) showed that the composition of its peptidoglycan was unusual for a Gram-negative species, because it contained both isomers of lysine and no A2pm. Recently, we purified and studied the properties of T. maritima MurE (12); this enzyme is responsible for the addition of the amino acid residue at position 3 of the peptide stem (13, 14). We demonstrated that T. maritima MurE added in vitro l- and d-Lys to UDP-MurNAc-l-Ala-d-Glu. Although l-Lys was added in the usual way, yielding the conventional nucleotide UDP-MurNAc-l-Ala-γ-d-Glu-l-Lys containing a d-Glu(γ→α)l-Lys amide bond, the d-isomer was added in an “upside-down” manner, yielding the novel nucleotide UDP-MurNAc-l-Ala-d-Glu(γ→ϵ)d-Lys. We also showed that the d-Lys-containing nucleotide was not a substrate for T. maritima MurF, the subsequent enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway, whereas this ligase catalyzed the addition of dipeptide d-Ala-d-Ala to the l-Lys-containing tripeptide, yielding the conventional UDP-MurNAc-pentapeptide (12).However, both the l-Lys-containing UDP-MurNAc-pentapeptide and d-Lys-containing UDP-MurNAc-tripeptide were used as substrates by T. maritima MraY with comparable efficiencies in vitro (12). This observation implies that the unusual d-Lys-containing peptide stems are likely to be translocated to the periplasmic face of the cytoplasmic membrane and to participate in peptidoglycan polymerization. Therefore, we have determined here the fine structure of T. maritima peptidoglycan and we have shown that l-Lys- and d-Lys-containing peptide stems are both present in the polymer, the latter being involved in the formation of two novel types of peptidoglycan cross-link.  相似文献   

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