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1.
Cutin is synthesized from oxygenated fatty acids derived preponderantly from oleic acid. The enzymatic pathways involved in the biosynthesis of such cutin monomers have been studied, i.e. 18-hydroxyoleic acid, 9,10-epoxy-18-hydroxystearic acid (the major constituent) and 9,10,18-trihydroxystearic acid. This was approached by studying (i) the substrate specificity and stereoselectivity of purified peroxygenase, which epoxidizes unsaturated fatty acids, and fatty acid epoxide hydrolase, i.e. two enzyme activities that have been found recently in higher plants, and (ii) the transformation of oleic acid into cutin monomers by a cell free system, i.e. soybean microsomes. These two enzymes, along with a ω-hydroxylating activity, can account for the biosynthesis of the oleic acid-derived cutin monomers and their precursors. A new biosynthetic scheme is proposed, whose pathways take into account the dynamic aspects of the expression of the different enzyme activities involved. Importantly, since peroxygenase, for its activity, is strictly dependent on fatty acid hydroperoxides, which act as co-substrates, the biosynthesis of cutin monomers is also dependent on the activity of lipoxygenases.  相似文献   

2.
The cutins of fruits and leaves of four apple cultivars have been analysed using TLC, GLC and GC-MS. They are similarly composed of saturated, monounsaturated and diunsaturated fatty, hydroxy-fatty and epoxyhydroxy-fatty acids. The most abundant monomers are 18-hydroxyoctadeca-9,12-dienoic, 10,16-dihydroxyhexadecanoic, 9,10-epoxy-18-hydroxyoctadec-12-enoic, 9,10-epoxy-18-hydroxyoctadecanoic and 9,10,18-trihydroxyoctadecanoic acids. The fruit cutins have high contents of epoxides (35–40%) and unsaturated components ( > 40%) and C18 compounds predominate over C16. The leaf cutins contain smaller amounts of unsaturated components than the fruits and higher proportions of C16 compounds. The adaxial leaf cutin differs in composition from the abaxial. 10,16-Dihydroxyhexadecanoic and 9,10-epoxy-18-hydroxoctadecanoic acids are the major constituents (each ca. 30%) of the adaxial leaf cutin and 10,16-dihydroxyhexadecanoic acid (55–65%) predominates in the abaxial.  相似文献   

3.
Plant cuticle is an extracellular lipid-based matrix of cutin and waxes, which covers aerial organs and protects them from many forms of environmental stress. We report here the characterization of CER8 / LACS1 , one of nine Arabidopsis long-chain acyl-CoA synthetases thought to activate acyl chains. Mutations in LACS1 reduced the amount of wax in all chemical classes on the stem and leaf, except in the very long-chain fatty acid (VLCFA) class wherein acids longer than 24 carbons (C24) were elevated more than 155%. The C16 cutin monomers on lacs1 were reduced by 37% and 22%, whereas the C18 monomers were increased by 28% and 20% on stem and leaf, respectively. Amounts of wax and cutin on a lacs1-1 lacs2-3 double mutant were much lower than on either parent, and lacs1-1 lacs2-3 had much higher cuticular permeability than either parent. These additive effects indicate that LACS1 and LACS2 have overlapping functions in both wax and cutin synthesis. We demonstrated that LACS1 has synthetase activity for VLCFAs C20–C30, with highest activity for C30 acids. LACS1 thus appears to function as a very long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase in wax metabolism. Since C16 but not C18 cutin monomers are reduced in lacs1 , and C16 acids are the next most preferred acid (behind C30) by LACS1 in our assays, LACS1 also appears to be important for the incorporation of C16 monomers into cutin polyester. As such, LACS1 defines a functionally novel acyl-CoA synthetase that preferentially modifies both VLCFAs for wax synthesis and long-chain (C16) fatty acids for cutin synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
Oxygenated fatty acids such as ricinoleic acid and vernolic acid can serve in the industry as synthons for the synthesis of a wide range of chemicals and polymers traditionally produced by chemical conversion of petroleum derivatives. Oxygenated fatty acids can also be useful to synthesize specialty chemicals such as cosmetics and aromas. There is thus a strong interest in producing these fatty acids in seed oils (triacylglycerols) of crop species. In the last 15 years or so, much effort has been devoted to isolate key genes encoding proteins involved in the synthesis of oxygenated fatty acids and to express them in the seeds of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana or crop species. An often overlooked but rich source of enzymes catalyzing the synthesis of oxygenated fatty acids and their esterification to glycerol is the biosynthetic pathways of the plant lipid polyesters cutin and suberin. These protective polymers found in specific tissues of all higher plants are composed of a wide variety of oxygenated fatty acids, many of which have not been reported in seed oils (e.g. saturated ω-hydroxy fatty acids and α,ω-diacids). The purpose of this mini-review is to give an overview of the recent advances in the biosynthesis of cutin and suberin and discuss their potential utility in producing specific oxygenated fatty acids for specialty chemicals. Special emphasis is given to the role played by specific acyltransferases and P450 fatty acid oxidases. The use of plant surfaces as possible sinks for the accumulation of high value-added lipids is also highlighted.  相似文献   

5.
The cuticle covering every plant aerial organ is largely made of cutin that consists of fatty acids, glycerol, and aromatic monomers. Despite the huge importance of the cuticle to plant development and fitness, our knowledge regarding the assembly of the cutin polymer and its integration in the complete cuticle structure is limited. Cutin composition implies the action of acyltransferase-type enzymes that mediate polymer construction through ester bond formation. Here, we show that a member of the BAHD family of acyltransferases (DEFECTIVE IN CUTICULAR RIDGES [DCR]) is required for incorporation of the most abundant monomer into the polymeric structure of the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) flower cutin. DCR-deficient plants display phenotypes that are typically associated with a defective cuticle, including altered epidermal cell differentiation and postgenital organ fusion. Moreover, levels of the major cutin monomer in flowers, 9(10),16-dihydroxy-hexadecanoic acid, decreased to an almost undetectable amount in the mutants. Interestingly, dcr mutants exhibit changes in the decoration of petal conical cells and mucilage extrusion in the seed coat, both phenotypes formerly not associated with cutin polymer assembly. Excessive root branching displayed by dcr mutants and the DCR expression pattern in roots pointed to the function of DCR belowground, in shaping root architecture by influencing lateral root emergence and growth. In addition, the dcr mutants were more susceptible to salinity, osmotic, and water deprivation stress conditions. Finally, the analysis of DCR protein localization suggested that cutin polymerization, possibly the oligomerization step, is partially carried out in the cytoplasmic space. Therefore, this study extends our knowledge regarding the functionality of the cuticular layer and the formation of its major constituent the polymer cutin.One of the most crucial adaptations of plants to the terrestrial environment 450 million years ago was the formation of their surface, the cuticle. The cuticular layer, which is covalently attached to the cell wall, plays multiple roles in the plant interaction with its surroundings, including the regulation of epidermal permeability and nonstomatal water loss (Sieber et al., 2000). It is also recognized to be vital for plant growth and development, for example through mediating the prevention or promotion of postgenital organ fusion and the interaction between the pollen and the pistil (Lolle et al., 1998).The major component of the cuticle is cutin, a polyester insoluble in organic solvents, consisting of aliphatics (C16 and C18 fatty acids), aromatics (mainly ferulic and coumaric acids), and glycerol, which are likely linked by the action of different acyltransferases. Cutin insolubility could be explained either by covalent linkage to the cell wall or by cross-linking within its aliphatic domain (Pollard et al., 2008). Recently, α,ω-dicarboxylic and in-chain hydroxy fatty acids have been reported as the characteristic monomers of cutin in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; Bonaventure et al., 2004; Franke et al., 2005). Cutin polymerization possibly involves the formation of an oligomeric building block for lipid polyesters composed of the three components mentioned above. Oligomerization putatively occurs within the epidermal cells, and the oligomers are further relocated with the aid of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters to the extracellular matrix, where the polymerization itself might occur (Pollard et al., 2008). The recently identified GLYCEROL-3-PHOSPHATE ACYLTRANSFERASE4 (GPAT4) and GPAT8 are likely involved in oligomer formation through CoA-activated aliphatic fatty acid attachment to glycerol-3-phosphate (Li et al., 2007). However, GPATs represent only one component of the more complex machinery required for cutin oligomer and polymer formation.Recently, lipase-type enzymes have been proposed to be involved in the polymerization step that occurs in the apoplastic space of the epidermal cell extracellular matrix. The BODYGUARD (BDG) gene encodes a member of the α/β-hydrolase fold protein and is polarly localized in the outer cell walls of the Arabidopsis epidermal cells. It was suggested that BDG is involved in the completion of the apoplastic polymerization process, although the mechanism of its activity remains unclear (Kurdyukov et al., 2006a). A second gene identified in Agave americana (AgaSGNH) encodes a protein belonging to the SGNH hydrolase superfamily of lipases. Similar to BDG, AgaSGNH is polarly localized in the epidermal cell outer cell wall. It is mostly expressed in the expanding parts of young leaves where cutin biosynthesis is most active. The authors suggested that AgaSGNH is involved in cutin polymer formation through a yet unknown mechanism (Reina et al., 2007).Dicarboxylic fatty acids are the major cutin monomers in leaves and stem tissues of Arabidopsis, representing nearly half of its load. In addition to dicarboxylic acids, leaves and stems of Arabidopsis contain in-chain hydroxy fatty acids, among them 9(10),16-dihydroxy-hexadecanoic acid (up to 15% of total cutin; Nawrath, 2006). 9(10),16-Dihydroxy-hexadecanoic acid is the major cutin monomer of most angiosperms and gymnosperms (Holloway, 1982) and dominates the cutin composition of reproductive organs in many plant species, such as Vicia faba flower petals (Kolattukudy et al., 1974) and fruits of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum; Saladié et al., 2007), cherry (Prunus avium; Peschel et al., 2007), and gooseberry (Ribes uva-crispa; Kolattukudy, 2001). Early studies showed that at least half of secondary and all primary hydroxy groups of polyhydroxy fatty acids are esterified within the cutin polymer (Kolattukudy, 2001; Pollard et al., 2008). Thus, the existence of acyltransferases responsible for the acylation of either the primary or the secondary hydroxy groups of, for example, 9(10),16-dihydroxy-hexadecanoic acid, is anticipated. It is also possible that a second type of acyltransferase could utilize the CoA ester of the acid in order to incorporate it into the cutin polymeric structure.In this study, we show that the DEFECTIVE IN CUTICULAR RIDGES (DCR) gene encoding a putative acyltransferase of the Arabidopsis BAHD family is indispensable for the incorporation of 9(10),16-dihydroxy-hexadecanoic acid into the cutin polymer of reproductive and vegetative tissues. Chemical analysis shows that this acid is the most abundant Arabidopsis flower cutin monomer, representing nearly half of the cutin load. The characterization of DCR highlighted two new functions of the cuticle in decorating petal conical cells and the release of mucilage from the seed coat epidermis cells. The dramatic phenotypes of DCR mutant lines and the susceptibility of the mutant plants to water deprivation, salt, and osmotic stresses emphasize the importance of the intact cuticle in the protection against abiotic stresses. Furthermore, localization experiments of the DCR protein suggest that the process of cutin oligomerization or polymerization might take place in the cytoplasmic space. These findings shed light on cutin oligomer/polymer formation and the cuticle function in organ development.  相似文献   

6.
The cuticle is a complex aliphatic polymeric layer connected to the cell wall and covers surfaces of all aerial plant organs. The cuticle prevents nonstomatal water loss, regulates gas exchange, and acts as a barrier against pathogen infection. The cuticle is synthesized by epidermal cells and predominantly consists of an aliphatic polymer matrix (cutin) and intracuticular and epicuticular waxes. Cutin monomers are primarily C(16) and C(18) unsubstituted, ω-hydroxy, and α,ω-dicarboxylic fatty acids. Phenolics such as ferulate and p-coumarate esters also contribute to a minor extent to the cutin polymer. Here, we present the characterization of a novel acyl-coenzyme A (CoA)-dependent acyl-transferase that is encoded by a gene designated Deficient in Cutin Ferulate (DCF). The DCF protein is responsible for the feruloylation of ω-hydroxy fatty acids incorporated into the cutin polymer of aerial Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) organs. The enzyme specifically transfers hydroxycinnamic acids using ω-hydroxy fatty acids as acyl acceptors and hydroxycinnamoyl-CoAs, preferentially feruloyl-CoA and sinapoyl-CoA, as acyl donors in vitro. Arabidopsis mutant lines carrying DCF loss-of-function alleles are devoid of rosette leaf cutin ferulate and exhibit a 50% reduction in ferulic acid content in stem insoluble residues. DCF is specifically expressed in the epidermis throughout all green Arabidopsis organs. The DCF protein localizes to the cytosol, suggesting that the feruloylation of cutin monomers takes place in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Terrestrial plants produce extracellular aliphatic biopolyesters that modify cell walls of specific tissues. Epidermal cells synthesize cutin, a polyester of glycerol and modified fatty acids that constitutes the framework of the cuticle that covers aerial plant surfaces. Suberin is a related lipid polyester that is deposited on the cell walls of certain tissues, including the root endodermis and the periderm of tubers, tree bark and roots. These lipid polymers are highly variable in composition among plant species, and often differ among tissues within a single species. Here, we describe a detailed protocol to study the monomer composition of cutin in Arabidopsis thaliana leaves by sodium methoxide (NaOMe)-catalyzed depolymerisation, derivatization, and subsequent gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC/MS) analysis. This method can be used to investigate the monomers of insoluble polyesters isolated from whole delipidated plant tissues bearing either cutin or suberin. The method can by applied not only to characterize the composition of lipid polymers in species not previously analyzed, but also as an analytical tool in forward and reverse genetic approaches to assess candidate gene function.  相似文献   

9.
The cuticle fulfills multiple roles in the plant life cycle, including protection from environmental stresses and the regulation of organ fusion. It is largely composed of cutin, which consists of C(16-18) fatty acids. While cutin composition and biosynthesis have been studied, the export of cutin monomers out of the epidermis has remained elusive. Here, we show that DESPERADO (AtWBC11) (abbreviated DSO), encoding a plasma membrane-localized ATP-binding cassette transporter, is required for cutin transport to the extracellular matrix. The dso mutant exhibits an array of surface defects suggesting an abnormally functioning cuticle. This was accompanied by dramatic alterations in the levels of cutin monomers. Moreover, electron microscopy revealed unusual lipidic cytoplasmatic inclusions in epidermal cells, disappearance of the cuticle in postgenital fusion areas, and altered morphology of trichomes and pavement cells. We also found that DSO is induced by salt, abscisic acid, and wounding stresses and its loss of function results in plants that are highly susceptible to salt and display reduced root branching. Thus, DSO is not only essential for developmental plasticity but also plays a vital role in stress responses.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Germinating nasturtium pollen (Tropaeolum majus) is shown to excrete an enzyme(s) which hydrolyzes all types of monomers from biosynthetically labeled cutin and p-nitrophenyl esters, which are model substrates for fungal cutinases. The pollen cutinase showed an optimum pH near 6.5 and was inhibited by thiol-directed reagents such as p-hydroxymercuribenzoate and N-ethyl maleimide but not by diisopropyl-fluorophosphate, an “active serine”-directed reagent indicating that the pollen enzyme is an “-SH cutinase” unlike the fungal enzyme which is a serine cutinase. Excretion of the pollen cutinase into the extracellular fluid was complete within 4 to 6 hours at 30 C. Since actinomycin D and cycloheximide showed little effect on the level of cutinase excreted, it appears that cutinase is an enzyme synthesized prior to germination. Release of cutinase into the medium did not require germination. Electron microscopy revealed the presence of a continuous cutin layer on mature stigma with extensive folds, which are proposed to play a role similar to that played by the cellular papillae found in the stigma of other plants. Chemical analysis of stigma cutin by depolymerization and combined gas-liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry showed that this cutin consists of mainly the C16 family of acids. The major (70%) components were dihydroxy C16 acids which consisted of 10,16- (64%), 9,16- (16%), 8,16- (12%), and 7,16- (8%) dihydroxy plamitic acid. Deuterium-labeling studies showed the presence of 16-oxo-9-hydroxy C16 acid and 16-oxo-10-hydroxy C16 acid in this cutin. The biochemical and ultrastructural studies indicate that the pollen tube may gain entry into stigma using cutinase excreted by the pollen.  相似文献   

12.
Introduction – The plant cuticle is a thin, predominantly lipid layer that covers all primary aerial surfaces of vascular plants. The monomeric building blocks of the cutin biopolymer are mainly ω‐hydroxy fatty acids. Objective – Analysis of ω‐hydroxy fatty acids from cutin isolated from tomato fruits at different stages of decomposition in soil. Different derivatives and mass spectrometric techniques were used for peak identification and evaluation. Methodology – Preparation of purified cutin involving dewaxing and HCl treatment. Incubation of purified cutin for 20 months in soil. Pentafluorobenzoyl derivatives were used for GC/MS operated in the electron capture negative ion (ECNI) mode and trimethylsilyl ethers for GC/MS operated in the electron ionisation (EI) mode for analysis of ω‐hydroxy fatty acids. Results – Six ω‐hydroxy fatty acids were detected in the purified cutin, three of which were identified as degradation products of 9,16‐dihydroxyhexadecanoic acid as a consequence of the HCl treatment involved in the purification step. Incubation of the isolated cutin in soil was accompanied with decrease in concentration of all hydroxyl fatty acids. Conclusion – We produced evidence that the HCl treatment only affected free hydroxyl groups and thus could be used for proportioning free and bound OH‐groups on cutin fatty acids. The method enabled a direct quantification of the ω‐hydroxy fatty acids throughout the incubation phase. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
The structure and composition of the cutin monomers from the flower petals of Vicia faba were determined by hydrogenolysis (LiAlH4) or deuterolysis (LiAlD4) followed by thin layer chromatography and combined gas-liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. The major components were 10, 16-dihydroxyhexadecanoic acid (79.8%), 9, 16-dihydroxyhexadecanoic acid (4.2%), 16-hydroxyhexadecanoic acid (4.2%), 18-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid (1.6%), and hexadecanoic acid (2.4%). These results show that flower petal cutin is very similar to leaf cutin of V. faba. Developing petals readily incorporated exogenous [1-14C]palmitic acid into cutin. Direct conversion of the exogeneous acid into 16-hydroxyhexadecanoic acid, 10, 16-dihydroxy-, and 9, 16-dihydroxyhexadecanoic acid was demonstrated by radio gas-liquid chromatography of their chemical degradation products. About 1% of the exogenous [1-14C]palmitic acid was incorporated into C27, C29, and C31n-alkanes, which were identified by combined gas-liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry as the major components of the hydrocarbons of V. faba flowers. The radioactivity distribution among these three alkanes (C27, 15%; C29, 48%; C31, 38%) was similar to the per cent composition of the alkanes (C27, 12%; C29, 43%; C31, 44%). [1-14C]Stearic acid was also incorporated into C27, C29, and C31n-alkanes in good yield (3%). Trichloroacetate, which has been postulated to be an inhibitor of fatty acid elongation, inhibited the conversion of [1-14C]stearic acid to alkanes, and the inhibition was greatest for the longer alkanes. Developing flower petals also incorporated exogenous C28, C30, and C32 acids into alkanes in 0.5% to 5% yields. [G-3H]n-octacosanoic acid (C28) was incorporated into C27, C29, and C31n-alkanes. [G-3H]n-triacontanoic acid (C30) was incorporated mainly into C29 and C31 alkanes, whereas [9, 10, 11-3H]n-dotriacontanoic acid (C32) was converted mainly to C31 alkane. Trichloroacetate inhibited the conversion of the exogenous acids into alkanes with carbon chains longer than the exogenous acid, and at the same time increased the amount of the direct decarboxylation product formed. These results clearly demonstrate direct decarboxylation as well as elongation and decarboxylation of exogenous fatty acids, and thus constitute the most direct evidence thus far obtained for an elongation-decarboxylation mechanism for the biosynthesis of alkanes.  相似文献   

14.
Purified cutin from cranberry (Vaccinium macrocarpon, var. Howes) skin was selectively degraded, and the cutin acids, as methyl esters, separated by TLC into seven classes including monobasic acids, dibasic acids, monohydroxy monobasic acids, monohydroxy epoxymonobasic acids, vic-dihydroxy dibasic acids, dihydroxy monobasic acids and trihydroxy monobasic acids. Of the 41 components identified in cranberry cutin by GLC and MS analysis, 18-hydroxyoctadec-cis-9-enoic acid (9·4%), 18-hydroxy-cis-9,10-epoxyoctadecanoic acid (7·5%), 10,16-dihydroxyhexadecanoic acid (16·7%) and threo-9,10,18-trihydroxyoctadecanoic acid (43·7%) were shown to be the major constituents.  相似文献   

15.
Cutin hydrolysate induced the production of an extracellular cutinase by glucose-grown Fusarium solani f. sp. pisi. The rate of production depended on the amount of cutin hydrolysate added up to 80 mug/ml, and saturation was attained at this level. Glucose was found to be a repressor of cutinase production. A radial immunodiffusion assay for cutinase was developed, and the induction of cutinase by cutin hydrolysate was confirmed by this direct assay. When cutinase was induced by cutin hydrolysate, exogenous labeled phenylalanine was incorporated into cutinase, which was shown to be the major (>70%) protein in the extracellular fluid. Induction of cutinase by cutin hydrolysate was not inhibited by actinomycin D and was stimulated ( approximately 100%) by cordycepin. Addition of cycloheximide with the inducer, or up to 12 h after the addition of the inducer, resulted in a nearly immediate cessation of cutinase production. Deoxyglucose, an inhibitor of proten glycosylation, inhibited the induction of cutinase by cutin hydrolysate. omega-Hydroxy fatty acids were more effective in inducing cutinase than any of the other more polar acids of cutin. Experiments with derivatives and analogues of omega-hydroxy C(16) acid indicated that a free hydroxyl group at the omega-position was the most important factor determining the cutinase-inducing activity. n-Aliphatic primary alcohols with 14 or more carbon atoms induced cutinase, and n-C(16) was the most effective inducer. These results strongly suggest that the monomers function as the chemical signal which induces the extracellular hydrolase.  相似文献   

16.
《Process Biochemistry》2007,42(2):210-214
The growth, lipid content and fatty acid composition of Schizochytrium limacinum OUC88 at different temperatures (16, 23, 30 and 37 °C) and salinities (0, 0.9, 1.8, 2.7 and 3.6%, w/v) were analyzed. The strain grew better and lipid contents were higher at 16–30 °C and salinity at 0.9–3.6% (w/v). The adaptive responses of this microbe to temperature and salinity were mainly to regulate the degree of fatty acid unstauration to maintain the normal membrane lipid physical state. However, at 37 °C and 0 salinity, the growth of the strain was inhibited obviously and the lipid content reduced significantly and, some important changes occurred in fatty acid composition, especially the odd-numbered fatty acids 15:0 and 17:0 which amounts increased greatly. In addition, the ratio of DHA to DPA changed at different temperatures and salinities.  相似文献   

17.
The extracellular protein EP2 was previously identified as non-specific lipid transfer protein based on its cDNA-derived amino acid sequence. Here, the purification of the EP2 protein from the medium of somatic embryo cultures is described. After two cycles of ion-exchange and gel permeation chromatography, a single silver-stained protein band with an apparent molecular mass of 10 kDa was observed on SDS-PAGE. This protein band was recognized by the antiserum raised against a EP2--galactosidase fusion-protein. Employing a fluorescent phospholipid analog, it was shown that the purified EP2 protein is capable of binding phospholipids and is able to enhance their transfer between artificial membranes. Employing a gel permeation assay, it could be demonstrated that the EP2 protein is also capable of binding palmitic and oleic acid as well as oleyl-CoA. Because in plants these fatty acids are used as precursor molecules for cutin, these results are in support of the proposed role of the EP2 protein to transport cutin monomers from their site of synthesis through the cell wall of epidermal cells to sites of cutin polymerization.  相似文献   

18.
The cuticular wax and cutin components of the cuticular membranes isolated from the leaves of two spinach cultivars have been determined. The membranes contain about 0·007 mg/cm2 of cuticular wax which comprises monobasic acids (C16–C38) with hexadecanoic as the major component. The amounts of cutin are comparable with those of cuticular wax and the monomeric constituents are predominantly C18 epoxy compounds. The most abundant monomer is 9,10-epoxy-18-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid (up to 63%) together with substantial amounts of 9,10,18-trihydroxyoctadecanoic acid (up to 22%). Also present are 9,10-epoxyoctadecane-1,18-dioic acid (6–7%) dihydroxyhexadecanoic acid (3–4%) and ω-hydroxymonobasic and fatty acid fractions. The tentative identification of two minor components, 18-hydroxyoxooctadecanoic and 9,10-epoxy-12,18-dihydroxyoctadecanoic acids, is also made. Although spinach membranes have a delicate structure their cutin composition is essentially similar to that of much more substantial membranes.  相似文献   

19.
Composition of the cuticle of developing sweet cherry fruit   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The composition of wax and cutin from developing sweet cherry (Prunus avium) fruit was studied by GC-MS between 22 and 85 days after full bloom (DAFB). In this and our previous study, fruit mass and surface area increased in a sigmoidal pattern with time, but mass of the cuticular membrane (CM) per unit fruit surface area decreased. On a whole fruit basis, mass of CM increased up to 36 DAFB and remained constant thereafter. At maturity, triterpenes, alkanes and alcohols accounted for 75.6%, 19.1% and 1.2% of total wax, respectively. The most abundant constituents were the triterpenes ursolic (60.0%) and oleanolic acid (7.5%), the alkanes nonacosane (13.0%) and heptacosane (3.0%), and the secondary alcohol nonacosan-10-ol (1.1%). In developing fruit triterpenes per unit area decreased, but alkanes and alcohols remained essentially constant. The cutin fraction of mature fruit consisted of mostly C16 (69.5%) and, to a lower extent, C18 monomers (19.4%) comprising alkanoic, omega-hydroxyacids, alpha,omega-dicarboxylic and midchain hydroxylated acids. The most abundant constituents were 9(10),16-dihydroxy-hexadecanoic acid (53.6%) and 9,10,18-trihydroxy-octadecanoic acid (7.8%). Amounts of C16 and C18 monomers per unit area decreased in developing fruit, but remained approximately constant on a whole fruit basis. Within both classes of monomers, opposing changes occurred. Amounts of hexadecandioic, 16-hydroxy-hexadecanoic, 9(10)-hydroxy-hexadecane-1,16-dioic and 9,10-epoxy-octadecane-1,18-dioic acids increased, but 9,10,18-trihydroxy-octadecanoic and 9,10,18-trihydroxy-octadecenoic acids decreased. There were no qualitative and minor quantitative differences in wax and cutin composition between cultivars at maturity. Our data indicate that deposition of some constituents of wax and cutin ceased during early fruit development.  相似文献   

20.
The enzyme, which catalyzes hydrolysis of cutin, an insoluble biopolyester of hydroxy and epoxy fatty acids, was purified from porcine pancreas. With three different purification methods, previously used for the purification of pancreatic lipase, it is shown that cutin hydrolase is pancreatic lipase. This enzyme released oligomers and all types of monomers from the polymer with a pH optimum around 7.5. Taurodeoxycholate inhibited cutin hydrolysis by lipase and colipase reversed this inhibition. Evidence is presented which suggests that bile salt stabilizes the enzyme at the surface of the insoluble substrate and that the interaction of the polymer surface with the lipase-colipase-bile salt system is similar to that previously observed with triglycerides. Diethyl-p-nitrophenyl phosphate inhibited cutin hydrolysis by lipase but the hydrolysis was insensitive to diisopropyl fluorophosphate.  相似文献   

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