首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
2.
3.
4.
When subjected to nitrogen limitation, the wood-degrading fungus Phanerochaete chrysosporium produces two groups of secondary metabolic, extracellular isoenzymes that depolymerize lignin in wood: lignin peroxidases and manganese peroxidases. We have shown earlier the turnover in activity of the lignin peroxidases to be due in part to extracellular proteolytic activity. This paper reports the electrophoretic characterization of two sets of acidic extracellular proteases produced by submerged cultures of P. chrysosporium. The protease activity seen on day 2 of incubation, during primary growth when nitrogen levels are not known to be limiting, consisted of at least six proteolytic bands ranging in size from 82 to 22 kDa. The activity of this primary protease was strongly reduced in the presence of SDS. Following the day 2, when nitrogen levels are known to become limiting and cultures become ligninolytic, the main protease activity (secondary protease) consisted of a major proteolytic band of 76 kDa and a minor band of 25 kDa. The major and minor secondary protease activities were inhibited by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and pepstatin A, respectively. When cultures were grown in the presence of excess nitrogen (non-ligninolytic condition), the primary protease remained the principal protease throughout the culture period. These results identify and characterize a specific proteolytic activity associated with conditions that promote lignin degradation.  相似文献   

5.
Recalcitrance of plant biomass is closely related to the presence of the phenolic heteropolymer lignin in secondary cell walls, which has a negative effect on forage digestibility, biomass‐to‐biofuels conversion and chemical pulping. The genus Eucalyptus is the main source of wood for pulp and paper industry. However, when compared to model plants such as Arabidopsis thaliana and poplar, relatively little is known about lignin biosynthesis in Eucalyptus and only a few genes were functionally characterized. An efficient, fast and inexpensive in vitro system was developed to study lignification in Eucalyptus globulus and to evaluate the potential role of candidate genes in this biological process. Seedlings were grown in four different conditions, in the presence or absence of light and with or without sucrose in the growth medium, and several aspects of lignin metabolism were evaluated. Our results showed that light and, to a lesser extent, sucrose induced lignin biosynthesis, which was followed by changes in S/G ratio, lignin oligomers accumulation and gene expression. In addition, higher total peroxidase activity and differential isoperoxidase profile were observed when seedlings were grown in the presence of light and sucrose. Peptide sequencing allowed the identification of differentially expressed peroxidases, which can be considered potential candidate class III peroxidases involved in lignin polymerization in E. globulus.  相似文献   

6.
Several aromatic compounds increased initial lignin degradation rates in cultures of Phanerochaete chrysosporium. This activation was connected to increased H2O2 production and glucose oxidation rates. Veratryl alcohol, a natural secondary metabolite of P. chrysosporium, also activated the lignin-degrading system. In the presence of added veratryl alcohol the ligninolytic system appeared 6–8 h earlier than in reference cultures. This effect was only seen when lignin was added after the primary growth was completed because lignin itself also caused earlier appearance of the degradative system. In cultures which received no added lignin or veratryl alcohol the ligninolytic activity only appeared once the alcohol started to accumulate. The degradation patterns of veratryl alcohol and lignin were similar. The activity levels of lignin degradation and glucose oxidation could be regulated by veratryl alcohol concentration. It is suggested that either veratryl alcohol itself or a metabolite derived from it is actually responsible for the low levels of ligninolytic activity in glucose grown cultures.  相似文献   

7.
Bioalteration of the organic-soluble ether-insoluble fraction of Kraft pine lignin (KL-O) was studied. Various types of inocula ofPhanerochaeta chrysosporium were compared using a standing mode of cultivation under nitrogen limitation. Pellet inoculated and mycelial cultures required a period of about 10 days to become ligninolytically active. When spores were used as inoculum the bioalteration of lignin commenced earlier but the rate was considerably less. The total decrease in absorbance measured amounted to 61% within 20 days after addition of lignin to active mycelial cultures. This corresponded to a reduction of 50% in Klason lignin. Further reduction was possible only when the free lignin was extracted from the culture, purified and mixed with new active cells. Elemental analysis, Klason lignin content, absorptivity coefficient, molecular weight distribution and the presence of saccharides and proteins for free and cell recovered lignin were compared with KL-O. Microscopic observation showed the formation of new out-growths in the form of short hyphae appearing concurrently with ligninolytic activity.Abbreviations GPC Gel Permeation Chromatography - TLC Thin Layer Chromatography - rpm revolutions per minute - vvm volume per volume per minute  相似文献   

8.
Joseleau JP  Imai T  Kuroda K  Ruel K 《Planta》2004,219(2):338-345
The occurrence of lignin in the additional gelatinous (G-) layer that differentiates in the secondary wall of hardwoods during tension wood formation has long been debated. In the present work, the ultrastructural distribution of lignin in the cell walls of normal and tension wood fibres from poplar (Populus deltoides Bartr. ex Marshall) was investigated by transmission electron microscopy using cryo-fixation–freeze-substitution in association with immunogold probes directed against typical structural motifs of lignin. The specificity of the immunological probes for condensed and non-condensed guaiacyl and syringyl interunit linkages of lignin, and their high sensitivity, allowed detection of lignin epitopes of definite chemical structures in the G-layer of tension wood fibres. Semi-quantitative distribution of the corresponding epitopes revealed the abundance of syringyl units in the G-layer. Predominating non-condensed lignin sub-structures appeared to be embedded in the crystalline cellulose matrix prevailing in the G-layer. The endwise mode of polymerization that is known to lead to these types of lignin structures appears consistent with such an organized cellulose environment. Immunochemical labelling provides the first visualization in planta of lignin structures within the G-layer of tension wood. The patterns of distribution of syringyl epitopes indicate that syringyl lignin is deposited more intensely in the later phase of fibre secondary wall assembly. The data also illustrate that syringyl lignin synthesis in tension wood fibres is under specific spatial and temporal regulation targeted differentially throughout cell wall layers.Abbreviations G-layer Gelatinous layer - G Guaiacyl monomeric unit - PATAg Periodic acid–thiocarbohydrazide–silver proteinate - S Syringyl monomeric unit  相似文献   

9.
10.
The effects of hypergravity on elongation growth and lignin deposition in secondary cell walls of the Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. inflorescence stem were examined in plants grown for 3 days after exposure to hypergravity in the direction from shoot to root at 300 g for 24 h. The content of acetylbromide-extractable lignins in a secondary cell wall fraction prepared by enzyme digestion of inflorescence stem segments removing primary cell wall components was significantly increased by the hypergravity stimulus. Xylem vessels, particularly in a region closer to the base of the inflorescence stem, increased in number. Gadolinium chloride at 0.1 mM, a blocker of mechanoreceptors, partially suppressed the effect of hypergravity on lignin deposition in the secondary cell wall fraction. These results suggest that mechanoreceptors are responsible for hypergravity-induced lignin deposition in secondary cell walls in A. thaliana inflorescence stems.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Summary Phanerochaete chrysosporium (Sporotrichum pulverulentum) produced an extracellular glucan type polysaccharide when grown in a chemostat under nitrogen limitation. When cells were transferred to a standing mode of cultivation in the presence of excess glucose (6 gl–1), the amount of non-glucose total carbohydrates in the culture increased from 0.58 gl–1 to 1.76 gl–1 during 15 day experiments. The change in total carbohydrates was due to an increase in extracellular and cell-bound glucan type polysaccharide. This increase occured simultaneously with formation of mycelial mats and appearance of ligninolytic activity. When the cultures were agitated under atmospheric oxygen rather than 100% O2, their non-glucose total carbohydrate content increased to 2.15 gl–1 in 4 days. The excess polysaccharide formation had an inhibitory effect on lignin degradation as more lignin was degraded by cells with lower polysaccharide content. The lignin that was associated with cells after the degradation had stopped could be further degraded by new active cells.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Lignin is a major polymer in the secondary plant cell wall and composed of hydrophobic interlinked hydroxyphenylpropanoid units. The presence of lignin hampers conversion of plant biomass into biofuels; plants with modified lignin are therefore being investigated for increased digestibility. The bacterium Sphingomonas paucimobilis produces lignin‐degrading enzymes including LigD, LigF and LigG involved in cleaving the most abundant lignin interunit linkage, the β‐aryl ether bond. In this study, we expressed the LigD, LigF and LigG (LigDFG) genes in Arabidopsis thaliana to introduce postlignification modifications into the lignin structure. The three enzymes were targeted to the secretory pathway. Phenolic metabolite profiling and 2D HSQC NMR of the transgenic lines showed an increase in oxidized guaiacyl and syringyl units without concomitant increase in oxidized β‐aryl ether units, showing lignin bond cleavage. Saccharification yield increased significantly in transgenic lines expressing LigDFG, showing the applicability of our approach. Additional new information on substrate specificity of the LigDFG enzymes is also provided.  相似文献   

15.
The composition of suberin and lignin in endodermal cell walls (ECWs) and in rhizodermal/hypodermal cell walls (RHCWs) of developing primary maize (Zea mays L.) roots was analysed after depolymerisation of enzymatically isolated cell wall material. Absolute suberin amounts related to root length significantly increased from primary ECWs (Casparian strips) to secondary ECWs (suberin lamella). During further maturation of the endodermis, reaching the final tertiary developmental state characterised by the deposition of lignified secondary cell walls (u-shaped cell wall deposits), suberin amounts remained constant. Absolute amounts of lignin related to root length constantly increased throughout the change from primary to tertiary ECWs. The suberin of Casparian strips contained high amounts of carboxylic and 2-hydroxy acids, and differed substantially from the suberin of secondary and tertiary ECWs, which was dominated by high contents of ω-hydroxycarboxylic and 1,ω-dicarboxylic acids. Furthermore, the chain-length distribution of suberin monomers in primary ECWs ranged from C16 to C24, whereas in secondary and tertiary ECWs a shift towards higher chain lengths (C16 to C28) was observed. The lignin composition of Casparian strips (primary ECWs) showed a high syringyl content and was similar to lignin in secondary cell walls of the tertiary ECWs, whereas lignin in secondary ECWs contained higher amounts of p-hydroxyphenyl units. The suberin and lignin compositions of RHCWs rarely changed with increasing root age. However, compared to the suberin in ECWs, where C16 and C18 were the most prominent chain lengths, the suberin of RHCWs was dominated by the higher chain lengths (C24 and C26). The composition of RHCW lignin was similar to that of secondary-ECW lignin. Using lignin-specific antibodies, lignin epitopes were indeed found to be located in the Casparian strip. Surprisingly, the mature suberin layers of tertiary ECWs contained comparable amounts of lignin-like epitopes. Received: 19 August 1998 / Accepted: 3 February 1999  相似文献   

16.
The initiation and progress of wood degradation of Pinus sylvestris sapwood exposed to the brown-rot fungus Antrodia vaillantii was studied on a cellular level by scanning UV microspectrophotometry (UMSP 80, Zeiss, MSP 800 Spectralytics). This improved analytical technique enables direct imaging of lignin modification within individual cell wall layers. The topochemical analyses were supplemented by light and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) studies in order to characterize morphological changes during the first days of degradation. Small wood blocks (1.5 × 1.5 × 5 mm) of Scots pine (P. sylvestris) were exposed to fungal decay by A. vaillantii for 3, 7, 11, 16, and 22 days. No significant weight loss was determined in the initial decay periods within three up to 7 days. After three days of decay the topochemical investigation revealed that the lignin modification starts at the outermost part of the secondary wall layer, especially in the region of the latewood tracheids. During advanced degradation after exposure of 22 days, lignin modification occurs non-homogeneously throughout the tissue. Even among the significantly damaged cells, some apparently unmodified cells still exist. Knowledge about lignin modification at initial stages of wood degradation is of fundamental importance to provide more information on the progress of brown-rot decay.  相似文献   

17.
A specific condensed lignin substructure, dibenzodioxocin, was immunolocalized in differentiating cell walls of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) H. Karsten) and silver birch (Betula pendula Roth) xylem. A fluorescent probe, Alexa 488 was used as a marker on the dibenzodioxocin-specific secondary antibody. For the detection of this lignin substructure, 25-m cross-sections of xylem were viewed with a confocal laser-scanning microscope with fluorescein isothiocyanate fluorescence filters. In mature cells, fluorescence was detected in the S3 layer of the secondary wall in both tree species, but it was more intense in Norway spruce than in silver birch. In silver birch most of the signal was detected in vessel walls and less in fiber cell walls. In very young tracheids of Norway spruce and vessels and fibers of silver birch, where secondary cell wall layers were not yet formed, the presence of the dibenzodioxocin structure could not be shown.Abbreviation CLSM confocal laser-scanning fluorescence microscopy  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
A variety of insect species induce galls on host plants. Liquid chromatographic/tandem mass spectrometric analyses showed that a gall midge (Rhopalomyia yomogicola) that induces galls on Artemisia princeps contained high levels of indole-3-acetic acid and cytokinins. The gall midge larvae also synthesized indole-3-acetic acid from tryptophan. Close observation of gall tissue sections indicated that the larval chamber was surrounded by layers of cells having secondary cell walls with extensive lignin deposition, except for the part of the gall that constituted the feeding nutritive tissue which was composed of small cells negatively stained for lignin. The differences between these two types of tissue were confirmed by an expression analysis of the genes involved in the synthesis of the secondary cell wall. Phytohormones may have functioned in maintaining the feeding part of the gall as fresh nutritive tissue. Together with the results in our previous study, those presented here suggest the importance of phytohormones in gall induction.  相似文献   

20.
Mesophyll cells of Zinnia elegans var. Envy that had been induced to differentiate into tracheary elements (TEs) in suspension culture were treated with the cellulose synthesis inhibitor 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile (DCB). The deposition of cellulose into the patterned secondary cell wall thickenings typical of TEs was inhibited as demonstrated by reduced incorporation of [14C]glucose into acetic/nitric insoluble material and absence of cellulose detectable by fluorescence after staining with Tinopal LPW, polarization optics, or labeling with a specific cellulase. Respiration as indicated by release of 14CO2 was inhibited to a much lesser extent, supporting a selective mechanism of action of DCB on the cellulose biosynthetic pathway. Patterned secondary cell wall thickenings were deposited in DCB-treated TEs, but these were smaller and less regularly shaped than those of control TEs. These cellulose-depleted thickenings lacked another abundant component of normal thickenings, the hemicellulose xylan, as indicated by absence of labeling with a specific xylanase or an antibody to xylan. DCB-treated TEs also showed dispersed lignin after staining with phloroglucinol, whereas control TEs contained lignin specifically localized to the secondary cell wall thickenings. Isoxaben, another recently described inhibitor of synthesis of acetic/nitric insoluble cell wall material (putatively cellulose), caused the same absence of detectable cellulose and xylan in the thickenings and dispersed lignin. These data suggest that: (i) the localization of lignin is ultimately dependent on the localization of cellulose; (ii) normal patterned wall assembly in TEs occurs in a self-perpetuating cascade in which some molecules of the secondary cell wall mediate patterning of others.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号