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1.
Screening of commercially available fluoro monosaccharides as putative growth inhibitors in Arabidopsis thaliana revealed that 2‐fluoro 2‐l ‐fucose (2F‐Fuc) reduces root growth at micromolar concentrations. The inability of 2F‐Fuc to affect an Atfkgp mutant that is defective in the fucose salvage pathway indicates that 2F‐Fuc must be converted to its cognate GDP nucleotide sugar in order to inhibit root growth. Chemical analysis of cell wall polysaccharides and glycoproteins demonstrated that fucosylation of xyloglucans and of N‐linked glycans is fully inhibited by 10 μm 2F‐Fuc in Arabidopsis seedling roots, but genetic evidence indicates that these alterations are not responsible for the inhibition of root development by 2F‐Fuc. Inhibition of fucosylation of cell wall polysaccharides also affected pectic rhamnogalacturonan‐II (RG‐II). At low concentrations, 2F‐Fuc induced a decrease in RG‐II dimerization. Both RG‐II dimerization and root growth were partially restored in 2F‐Fuc‐treated seedlings by addition of boric acid, suggesting that the growth phenotype caused by 2F‐Fuc was due to a deficiency of RG‐II dimerization. Closer investigation of the 2F‐Fuc‐induced growth phenotype demonstrated that cell division is not affected by 2F‐Fuc treatments. In contrast, the inhibitor suppressed elongation of root cells and promoted the emergence of adventitious roots. This study further emphasizes the importance of RG‐II in cell elongation and the utility of glycosyltransferase inhibitors as new tools for studying the functions of cell wall polysaccharides in plant development. Moreover, supplementation experiments with borate suggest that the function of boron in plants might not be restricted to RG‐II cross‐linking, but that it might also be a signal molecule in the cell wall integrity‐sensing mechanism.  相似文献   

2.
The cell‐wall pectic domain rhamnogalacturonan‐II (RG‐II) is cross‐linked via borate diester bridges, which influence the expansion, thickness and porosity of the wall. Previously, little was known about the mechanism or subcellular site of this cross‐linking. Using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) to separate monomeric from dimeric (boron‐bridged) RG‐II, we confirmed that Pb2+ promotes H3BO3‐dependent dimerisation in vitro. H3BO3 concentrations as high as 50 mm did not prevent cross‐linking. For in‐vivo experiments, we successfully cultured ‘Paul's Scarlet’ rose (Rosa sp.) cells in boron‐free medium: their wall‐bound pectin contained monomeric RG‐II domains but no detectable dimers. Thus pectins containing RG‐II domains can be held in the wall other than via boron bridges. Re‐addition of H3BO3 to 3.3 μm triggered a gradual appearance of RG‐II dimer over 24 h but without detectable loss of existing monomers, suggesting that only newly synthesised RG‐II was amenable to boron bridging. In agreement with this, Rosa cultures whose polysaccharide biosynthetic machinery had been compromised (by carbon starvation, respiratory inhibitors, anaerobiosis, freezing or boiling) lost the ability to generate RG‐II dimers. We conclude that RG‐II normally becomes boron‐bridged during synthesis or secretion but not post‐secretion. Supporting this conclusion, exogenous [3H]RG‐II was neither dimerised in the medium nor cross‐linked to existing wall‐associated RG‐II domains when added to Rosa cultures. In conclusion, in cultured Rosa cells RG‐II domains have a brief window of opportunity for boron‐bridging intraprotoplasmically or during secretion, but secretion into the apoplast is a point of no return beyond which additional boron‐bridging does not readily occur.  相似文献   

3.
Boron (B) is essential for plant cell‐wall structure and membrane functions. Compared with its role in cross‐linking the pectic domain rhamnogalacturonan II (RG‐II), little information is known about the biological role of B in membranes. Here, we investigated the involvement of glycosylinositol phosphorylceramides (GIPCs), major components of lipid rafts, in the membrane requirement for B. Using thin‐layer chromatography and mass spectrometry, we first characterized GIPCs from Rosa cell culture. The major GIPC has one hexose residue, one hexuronic acid residue, inositol phosphate, and a ceramide moiety with a C18 trihydroxylated mono‐unsaturated long‐chain base and a C24 monohydroxylated saturated fatty acid. Disrupting B bridging (by B starvation in vivo or by treatment with cold dilute HCl or with excess borate in vitro) enhanced the GIPCs' extractability. As RG‐II is the main B‐binding site in plants, we investigated whether it could form a B‐centred complex with GIPCs. Using high‐voltage paper electrophoresis, we showed that addition of GIPCs decreased the electrophoretic mobility of radiolabelled RG‐II, suggesting formation of a GIPC–B–RG‐II complex. Last, using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, we showed that added GIPCs facilitate RG‐II dimerization in vitro. We conclude that B plays a structural role in the plasma membrane. The disruption of membrane components by high borate may account for the phytotoxicity of excess B. Moreover, the in‐vitro formation of a GIPC–B–RG‐II complex gives the first molecular explanation of the wall–membrane attachment sites observed in vivo. Finally, our results suggest a role for GIPCs in the RG‐II dimerization process.  相似文献   

4.
Rhamnogalacturonan‐II (RG‐II) is structurally the most complex glycan in higher plants, containing 13 different sugars and 21 distinct glycosidic linkages. Two monomeric RG‐II molecules can form an RG‐II‐borate diester dimer through the two apiosyl (Api) residues of side chain A to regulate cross‐linking of pectin in the cell wall. But the relationship of Api biosynthesis and RG‐II dimer is still unclear. In this study we investigated the two homologous UDP‐D‐apiose/UDP‐D‐xylose synthases (AXSs) in Arabidopsis thaliana that synthesize UDP‐D‐apiose (UDP‐Api). Both AXSs are ubiquitously expressed, while AXS2 has higher overall expression than AXS1 in the tissues analyzed. The homozygous axs double mutant is lethal, while heterozygous axs1/+ axs2 and axs1 axs2/+ mutants display intermediate phenotypes. The axs1/+ axs2 mutant plants are unable to set seed and die. By contrast, the axs1 axs2/+ mutant plants exhibit loss of shoot and root apical dominance. UDP‐Api content in axs1 axs2/+ mutants is decreased by 83%. The cell wall of axs1 axs2/+ mutant plants is thicker and contains less RG‐II‐borate complex than wild‐type Col‐0 plants. Taken together, these results provide direct evidence of the importance of AXSs for UDP‐Api and RG‐II‐borate complex formation in plant growth and development.  相似文献   

5.
The Enterobacter cloacae complex (ECC) consists of closely related bacteria commonly associated with the human microbiota. ECC are increasingly isolated from healthcare‐associated infections, demonstrating that these Enterobacteriaceae are emerging nosocomial pathogens. ECC can rapidly acquire multidrug resistance to conventional antibiotics. Cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAMPs) have served as therapeutic alternatives because they target the highly conserved lipid A component of the Gram‐negative outer membrane. Many Enterobacteriaceae fortify their outer membrane with cationic amine‐containing moieties to prevent CAMP binding, which can lead to cell lysis. The PmrAB two‐component system (TCS) directly activates 4‐amino‐4‐deoxy‐l ‐arabinose (l ‐Ara4N) biosynthesis to result in cationic amine moiety addition to lipid A in many Enterobacteriaceae such as E. coli and Salmonella. In contrast, PmrAB is dispensable for CAMP resistance in E. cloacae. Interestingly, some ECC clusters exhibit colistin heteroresistance, where a subpopulation of cells exhibit clinically significant resistance levels compared to the majority population. We demonstrate that E. cloacae lipid A is modified with l ‐Ara4N to induce CAMP heteroresistance and the regulatory mechanism is independent of the PmrABEcl TCS. Instead, PhoPEcl binds to the arnBEcl promoter to induce l ‐Ara4N biosynthesis and PmrAB‐independent addition to the lipid A disaccharolipid. Therefore, PhoPQEcl contributes to regulation of CAMP heteroresistance in some ECC clusters.  相似文献   

6.
Plant cell walls are complex configurations of polysaccharides that fulfil a diversity of roles during plant growth and development. They also provide sets of biomaterials that are widely exploited in food, fibre and fuel applications. The pectic polysaccharides, which comprise approximately a third of primary cell walls, form complex supramolecular structures with distinct glycan domains. Rhamnogalacturonan I (RG–I) is a highly structurally heterogeneous branched glycan domain within the pectic supramolecule that contains rhamnogalacturonan, arabinan and galactan as structural elements. Heterogeneous RG–I polymers are implicated in generating the mechanical properties of cell walls during cell development and plant growth, but are poorly understood in architectural, biochemical and functional terms. Using specific monoclonal antibodies to the three major RG–I structural elements (arabinan, galactan and the rhamnogalacturonan backbone) for in situ analyses and chromatographic detection analyses, the relative occurrences of RG–I structures were studied within a single tissue: the tobacco seed endosperm. The analyses indicate that the features of the RG–I polymer display spatial heterogeneity at the level of the tissue and the level of single cell walls, and also heterogeneity at the biochemical level. This work has implications for understanding RG–I glycan complexity in the context of cell‐wall architectures and in relation to cell‐wall functions in cell and tissue development.  相似文献   

7.
Nucleic acids analogues, i.e., oligonucleotide N3′→P5′ phosphoramidates and N3′→P5′ thio‐phosphoramidates, containing 3′‐amino‐3′‐deoxy nucleosides with various 2′‐substituents were synthesized and extensively studied. These compounds resist nuclease hydrolysis and form stable duplexes with complementary native phosphodiester DNA and, particularly, RNA strands. An increase in duplexes' melting temperature, ΔTm, relative to their phosphodiester counterparts, reaches 2.2–4.0° per modified nucleoside. 2′‐OH‐ (RNA‐like), 2′‐O‐Me‐, and 2′‐ribo‐F‐nucleoside substitutions result in the highest degree of duplex stabilization. Moreover, under close to physiological salt and pH conditions, the 2′‐deoxy‐ and 2′‐fluoro‐phosphoramidate compounds form extremely stable triple‐stranded complexes with either single‐ or double‐stranded phosphodiester DNA oligonucleotides. Melting temperature, Tm, of these triplexes exceeds Tm values for the isosequential phosphodiester counterparts by up to 35°. 2′‐Deoxy‐N3′→P5′ phosphoramidates adopt RNA‐like C3′‐endo or N‐type nucleoside sugar‐ring conformations and hence can be used as stable RNA mimetics. Duplexes formed by 2′‐deoxy phosphoramidates with complementary RNA strands are not substrates for RNase H‐mediated cleavage in vitro. Oligonucleotide phosphoramidates and especially thio‐phosphoramidates conjugated with lipid groups are cell‐permeable and demonstrate high biological target specific activity in vitro. In vivo, these compounds show good bioavailability and efficient biodistribution to all major organs, while exerting acceptable toxicity at therapeutically relevant doses. Short oligonucleotide N3′→P5′ thio‐phosphoramidate conjugated to 5′‐palmitoyl group, designated as GRN163L (Imetelstat), was recently introduced as a potent human telomerase inhibitor. GRN163L is not an antisense agent; it is a direct competitive inhibitor of human telomerase, which directly binds to the active site of the enzyme and thus inhibits its activity. This compound is currently in multiple Phase‐I and Phase‐I/II clinical trials as potential broad‐spectrum anticancer agent.  相似文献   

8.
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10.
A new dinuclear copper(II) complex bridged by N‐[3‐(dimethylamino)propyl]‐N′‐ (2‐carbo‐xylatophenyl)oxamide (H3dmapob), and endcapped with 2,2′‐diamino‐4,4′‐bithiazole (dabt), namely [Cu2(dmapob)(dabt)(CH3OH)(pic)]·(DMF)0.75·(CH3OH)0.25 has been synthesized and characterized by elemental analysis, molar conductivity measurement, infrared and electronic spectra studies, and single‐crystal X‐ray diffraction. In the crystal structure, both copper(II) ions have square–pyramidal coordination geometries. The Cu···Cu separation through the oxamido bridge is 5.176(9) Å. A two‐dimensional supramolecular framework is formed through hydrogen bonds and π–π stacking interactions. The reactivities toward herring sperm DNA and bovine serum albumin (BSA) show that the complex can interact with the DNA via intercalation mode and bind to the BSA responsible for quenching of tryptophan fluorescence by the static quenching mechanism. The in vitro anticancer activities suggest that the copper(II) complex is active against the selected tumor cell lines. The influence of different bridging ligands in dinuclear complexes on the DNA‐ and BSA‐binding properties as well as anticancer activities is preliminarily discussed.  相似文献   

11.
In flowering plants, the growth of pollen tubes is essential for the delivery of sperm to the egg cells. Although many factors (including cell‐wall properties) are involved in this process, little is known about the underlying molecular mechanisms that regulate the growth of pollen tubes. We report here the characterization of an Arabidopsis mutant male gametophyte defective 4 (mgp4) that is severely defective in pollen tube growth. The mgp4 mutation also impairs root growth of pollen‐rescued mgp4 mutant plants generated by expressing MGP4 cDNA under the control of a pollen grain/tube‐specific promoter. The MGP4 gene encodes a putative xylosyltransferase and is expressed in many organs/tissues, including pollen tubes and roots. MGP4 protein expressed in Pichia pastoris exhibited xylosyltransferase activity and transferred d ‐xylose onto l ‐fucose. The pectic polysaccharide rhamnogalacturonan II (RG‐II), isolated from 7‐day‐old pollen‐rescued mutant seedlings, exhibited a 30% reduction in 2‐O‐methyl d ‐xylose residues. Furthermore, an exogenous supply of boric acid enhanced RG‐II dimer formation and partially restored the root growth of the pollen‐rescued mutant seedlings. Taken together, these results suggest that MGP4 plays important roles in pollen tube and root growth by acting as a xylosyltransferase involved in the biosynthesis of pectic RG‐II.  相似文献   

12.
An Fe(II)/α‐ketoglutarate‐dependent dioxygenase, SadA, was obtained from Burkholderia ambifaria AMMD and heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli. Purified recombinant SadA had catalytic activity towards several N‐substituted l‐amino acids, which was especially strong with N‐succinyl l‐leucine. With the NMR and LC‐MS analysis, SadA converted N‐succinyl l‐leucine into N‐succinyl l‐threo‐β‐hydroxyleucine with >99% diastereoselectivity. SadA is the first enzyme catalysing β‐hydroxylation of aliphatic amino acid‐related substances and a potent biocatalyst for the preparation of optically active β‐hydroxy amino acids.  相似文献   

13.
Representatives of Pectobacterium genus are some of the most harmful phytopathogens in the world. In the present study, we have elucidated novel aspects of plant–Pectobacterium atrosepticum interactions. This bacterium was recently demonstrated to form specific ‘multicellular’ structures – bacterial emboli in the xylem vessels of infected plants. In our work, we showed that the process of formation of these structures includes the pathogen‐induced reactions of the plant. The colonisation of the plant by P. atrosepticum is coupled with the release of a pectic polysaccharide, rhamnogalacturonan I, into the vessel lumen from the plant cell wall. This polysaccharide gives rise to a gel that serves as a matrix for bacterial emboli. P. atrosepticum‐caused infection involves an increase of reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels in the vessels, creating the conditions for the scission of polysaccharides and modification of plant cell wall composition. Both the release of rhamnogalacturonan I and the increase in ROS precede colonisation of the vessels by bacteria and occur only in the primary xylem vessels, the same as the subsequent formation of bacterial emboli. Since the appearance of rhamnogalacturonan I and increase in ROS levels do not hamper the bacterial cells and form a basis for the assembly of bacterial emboli, these reactions may be regarded as part of the susceptible response of the plant. Bacterial emboli thus represent the products of host–pathogen integration, since the formation of these structures requires the action of both partners.  相似文献   

14.
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16.
A new oxamido‐bridged bicopper(II) complex, [Cu2(pdpox)(bpy)(CH3OH)](ClO4), where H3pdpox and bpy stand for N‐(2‐hydroxyphenyl)‐N′‐[3‐(diethylamino)propyl]oxamide and 2,2′‐bipyridine, respectively, has been synthesized and characterized by elemental analyses, molar conductivity measurements, infrared and electronic spectra studies, and X‐ray single crystal diffraction. In the crystal structure, the pdpox3? ligand bridges two copper(II) ions as cisoid conformation. The inner copper(II) ion has a {N3O} square‐planar coordination geometry, while the exo‐ one is in a {N2O3} square‐pyramidal environment. There are two sets of interpenetrating two‐dimensional hydrogen bonding networks parallel to the planes (2 1 0) and (), respectively, to form a three‐dimensional supramolecular structure. The bicopper(II) complex exhibits cytotoxic activity against the SMMC7721 and A549 cell lines. The reactivity toward herring sperm DNA and bovine serum albumin revealed that the bicopper(II) complex can interact with the DNA by intercalation mode, and the complex binds to protein BSA responsible for quenching of tryptophan fluorescence by static quenching mechanism. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J BiochemMol Toxicol 27:412‐424, 2013; View this article online at wileyonlinelibrary.com . DOI 10.1002/jbt.21504  相似文献   

17.
Lipid A coats the outer surface of the outer membrane of Gram‐negative bacteria. In Francisella tularensis subspecies novicida lipid A is present either as the covalently attached anchor of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or as free lipid A. The lipid A moiety of Francisella LPS is linked to the core domain by a single 2‐keto‐3‐deoxy‐D‐manno‐octulosonic acid (Kdo) residue. F. novicida KdtA is bi‐functional, but F. novicida contains a membrane‐bound Kdo hydrolase that removes the outer Kdo unit. The hydrolase consists of two proteins (KdoH1 and KdoH2), which are expressed from adjacent, co‐transcribed genes. KdoH1 (related to sialidases) has a single predicted N‐terminal transmembrane segment. KdoH2 contains 7 putative transmembrane sequences. Neither protein alone catalyses Kdo cleavage when expressed in E. coli. Activity requires simultaneous expression of both proteins or mixing of membranes from strains expressing the individual proteins under in vitro assay conditions in the presence of non‐ionic detergent. In E. coli expressing KdoH1 and KdoH2, hydrolase activity is localized in the inner membrane. WBB06, a heptose‐deficient E. coli mutant that makes Kdo2‐lipid A as its sole LPS, accumulates Kdo‐lipid A when expressing the both hydrolase components, and 1‐dephospho‐Kdo‐lipid A when expressing both the hydrolase and the Francisella lipid A 1‐phosphatase (LpxE).  相似文献   

18.
2‐Chloro‐2′‐deoxyadenosine (cladribine, 1 ) was acylated with valproic acid ( 2 ) under various reaction conditions yielding 2‐chloro‐2′‐deoxy‐3′,5′‐O‐divalproyladenosine ( 3 ) as well as the 3′‐O‐ and 5′‐O‐monovalproylated derivatives, 2‐chloro‐2′‐deoxy‐3′‐O‐valproyladenosine ( 4 ) and 2‐chloro‐2′‐deoxy‐5′‐O‐valproyladenosine ( 5 ), as new co‐drugs. In addition, 6‐azauridine‐2′,3′‐O‐(ethyl levulinate) ( 8 ) was valproylated at the 5′‐OH group (→ 9 ). All products were characterized by 1H‐ and 13C‐NMR spectroscopy and ESI mass spectrometry. The structure of the by‐product 6 (N‐cyclohexyl‐N‐(cyclohexylcarbamoyl)‐2‐propylpentanamide), formed upon valproylation of cladribine in the presence of N,N‐dimethylaminopyridine and dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, was analyzed by X‐ray crystallography. Cladribine as well as its valproylated co‐drugs were tested upon their cancerostatic/cancerotoxic activity in human astrocytoma/oligodendroglioma GOS‐3 cells, in rat malignant neuro ectodermal BT4Ca cells, as well as in phorbol‐12‐myristate 13‐acetate (PMA)‐differentiated human THP‐1 macrophages. The most important result of these experiments is the finding that only the 3′‐O‐valproylated derivative 4 exhibits a significant antitumor activity while the 5′‐O‐ as well as the 3′,5′‐O‐divalproylated cladribine derivatives 3 and 5 proved to be inactive.  相似文献   

19.
The molecular basis of cell–cell adhesion in woody tissues is not known. Xylem cells in wood particles of hybrid poplar (Populus tremula × P. alba cv. INRA 717‐1B4) were separated by oxidation of lignin with acidic sodium chlorite when combined with extraction of xylan and rhamnogalacturonan‐I (RG‐I) using either dilute alkali or a combination of xylanase and RG‐lyase. Acidic chlorite followed by dilute alkali treatment enables cell–cell separation by removing material from the compound middle lamellae between the primary walls. Although lignin is known to contribute to adhesion between wood cells, we found that removing lignin is a necessary but not sufficient condition to effect complete cell–cell separation in poplar lines with various ratios of syringyl:guaiacyl lignin. Transgenic poplar lines expressing an Arabidopsis thaliana gene encoding an RG‐lyase (AtRGIL6) showed enhanced cell–cell separation, increased accessibility of cellulose and xylan to hydrolytic enzyme activities, and increased fragmentation of intact wood particles into small cell clusters and single cells under mechanical stress. Our results indicate a novel function for RG‐I, and also for xylan, as determinants of cell–cell adhesion in poplar wood cell walls. Genetic control of RG‐I content provides a new strategy to increase catalyst accessibility and saccharification yields from woody biomass for biofuels and industrial chemicals.  相似文献   

20.
NagZ is an N‐acetyl‐β‐d ‐glucosaminidase that participates in the peptidoglycan (PG) recycling pathway of Gram‐negative bacteria by removing N‐acetyl‐glucosamine (GlcNAc) from PG fragments that have been excised from the cell wall during growth. The 1,6‐anhydromuramoyl‐peptide products generated by NagZ activate β‐lactam resistance in many Gram‐negative bacteria by inducing the expression of AmpC β‐lactamase. Blocking NagZ activity can thereby suppress β‐lactam antibiotic resistance in these bacteria. The NagZ active site is dynamic and it accommodates distortion of the glycan substrate during catalysis using a mobile catalytic loop that carries a histidine residue which serves as the active site general acid/base catalyst. Here, we show that flexibility of this catalytic loop also accommodates structural differences in small molecule inhibitors of NagZ, which could be exploited to improve inhibitor specificity. X‐ray structures of NagZ bound to the potent yet non‐selective N‐acetyl‐β‐glucosaminidase inhibitor PUGNAc (O‐(2‐acetamido‐2‐deoxy‐d ‐glucopyranosylidene) amino‐N‐phenylcarbamate), and two NagZ‐selective inhibitors – EtBuPUG, a PUGNAc derivative bearing a 2‐N‐ethylbutyryl group, and MM‐156, a 3‐N‐butyryl trihydroxyazepane, revealed that the phenylcarbamate moiety of PUGNAc and EtBuPUG completely displaces the catalytic loop from the NagZ active site to yield a catalytically incompetent form of the enzyme. In contrast, the catalytic loop was found positioned in the catalytically active conformation within the NagZ active site when bound to MM‐156, which lacks the phenylcarbamate extension. Displacement of the catalytic loop by PUGNAc and its N‐acyl derivative EtBuPUG alters the active site conformation of NagZ, which presents an additional strategy to improve the potency and specificity of NagZ inhibitors.  相似文献   

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