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1.
The partial purification and characterization of cell wall polysaccharides isolated from suspension-cultured Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) cells are described. Extraction of isolated cell walls with 1.0 m LiCl solubilized pectic polysaccharides with glycosyl-linkage compositions similar to those of rhamnogalacturonans I and II, pectic polysaccharides isolated from walls of suspension-cultured sycamore cells. Treatment of LiCl-extracted Douglas fir walls with an endo-α-1,4-polygalacturonase released only small, additional amounts of pectic polysaccharide, which had a glycosyl-linkage composition similar to that of rhamnogalacturonan I. Xyloglucan oligosaccharides were released from the endo-α-1,4-polygalacturonase-treated walls by treatment with an endo-β-1,4-glucanase. These oligosaccharides included hepta- and nonasaccharides similar or identical to those released from sycamore cell walls by the same enzyme, and structurally related octa- and decasaccharides similar to those isolated from various angiosperms. Finally, additional xyloglucan and small amounts of xylan were extracted from the endo-β-1,4-glucanase-treated walls by 0.5 n NaOH. The xylan resembled that extracted by NaOH from dicot cell walls in that it contained 2,4- but not 3,4-linked xylosyl residues. In this study, a total of 15% of the cell wall was isolated as pectic material, 10% as xyloglucan, and less than 1% as xylan. The noncellulosic polysaccharides accounted for 26% of the cell walls, cellulose for 23%, protein for 34%, and ash for 5%, for a total of 88% of the cell wall. The cell walls of Douglas fir were more similar to dicot (sycamore) cell walls than to those of graminaceous monocots, because they had a predominance of xyloglucan over xylan as the principle hemicellulose and because they possessed relatively large amounts of rhamnogalacturonan-like pectic polysaccharides.  相似文献   

2.
The direct contact of cells to the environment is mediated in many organisms by an extracellular matrix. One common aspect of extracellular matrices is that they contain complex sugar moieties in form of glycoproteins, proteoglycans, and/or polysaccharides. Examples include the extracellular matrix of humans and animal cells consisting mainly of fibrillar proteins and proteoglycans or the polysaccharide based cell walls of plants and fungi, and the proteoglycan/glycolipid based cell walls of bacteria. All these glycostructures play vital roles in cell-to-cell and cell-to-environment communication and signalling.An extraordinary complex example of an extracellular matrix is present in the walls of higher plant cells. Their wall is made almost entirely of sugars, up to 75% dry weight, and consists of the most abundant biopolymers present on this planet. Therefore, research is conducted how to utilize these materials best as a carbon-neutral renewable resource to replace petrochemicals derived from fossil fuel. The main challenge for fuel conversion remains the recalcitrance of walls to enzymatic or chemical degradation due to the unique glycostructures present in this unique biocomposite.Here, we present a method for the rapid and sensitive analysis of plant cell wall glycostructures. This method OLIgo Mass Profiling (OLIMP) is based the enzymatic release of oligosaccharides from wall materials facilitating specific glycosylhydrolases and subsequent analysis of the solubilized oligosaccharide mixtures using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF/MS)1 (Figure 1). OLIMP requires walls of only 5000 cells for a complete analysis, can be performed on the tissue itself2, and is amenable to high-throughput analyses3. While the absolute amount of the solubilized oligosaccharides cannot be determined by OLIMP the relative abundance of the various oligosaccharide ions can be delineated from the mass spectra giving insights about the substitution-pattern of the native polysaccharide present in the wall.OLIMP can be used to analyze a wide variety of wall polymers, limited only by the availability of specific enzymes4. For example, for the analysis of polymers present in the plant cell wall enzymes are available to analyse the hemicelluloses xyloglucan using a xyloglucanase5, 11, 12, 13, xylan using an endo-β-(1-4)-xylanase 6,7, or for pectic polysaccharides using a combination of a polygalacturonase and a methylesterase 8. Furthermore, using the same principles of OLIMP glycosylhydrolase and even glycosyltransferase activities can be monitored and determined 9.  相似文献   

3.

Background and Aims

Transfer cells are plant cells specialized in apoplast/symplast transport and characterized by a distinctive wall labyrinth apparatus. The molecular architecture and biochemistry of the labyrinth apparatus are poorly known. The leaf lamina in the aquatic angiosperm Elodea canadensis consists of only two cell layers, with the abaxial cells developing as transfer cells. The present study investigated biochemical properties of wall ingrowths and associated plasmalemma in these cells.

Methods

Leaves of Elodea were examined by light and electron microscopy and ATPase activity was localized cytochemically. Immunogold electron microscopy was employed to localize carbohydrate epitopes associated with major cell wall polysaccharides and glycoproteins.

Key Results

The plasmalemma associated with the wall labyrinth is strongly enriched in light-dependent ATPase activity. The wall ingrowths and an underlying wall layer share an LM11 epitope probably associated with glucuronoarabinoxylan and a CCRC-M7 epitope typically associated with rhamnogalacturonan I. No labelling was observed with LM10, an antibody that recognizes low-substituted and unsubstituted xylan, a polysaccharide consistently associated with secondary cell walls. The JIM5 and JIM7 epitopes, associated with homogalacturonan with different degrees of methylation, appear to be absent in the wall labyrinth but present in the rest of cell walls.

Conclusions

The wall labyrinth apparatus of leaf transfer cells in Elodea is a specialized structure with distinctive biochemical properties. The high level of light-dependent ATPase activity in the plasmalemma lining the wall labyrinth is consistent with a formerly suggested role of leaf transfer cells in enhancing inorganic carbon inflow. The wall labyrinth is a part of the primary cell wall. The discovery that the wall ingrowths in Elodea have an antibody-binding pattern divergent, in part, from that of the rest of cell wall suggests that their carbohydrate composition is modulated in relation to transfer cell functioning.  相似文献   

4.
On the Cytochemistry of Cell Wall Formation in Poplar Trees   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Abstract: The ultrastructure of cell walls and the mechanisms of cell wall formation are still not fully understood. The objective of our study was therefore to obtain additional fine structural details on the deposition of cell wall components during the differentiation of xylem cells in hybrid aspen ( Populus tremula L. × P. tremuloides Michx.) we used as a model tree. At the electron microscope level, PATAg staining revealed a successive deposition of polysaccharides with increasing distance from the cambium. Staining with potassium permanganate and UV microspectrophotometry showed that the cell walls were lignified, with some delay to the deposition of polysaccharides. Immunogold labelling of three lignin types in developing cell walls varied with progressive deposition of cell wall layers. Condensed lignin subunits were localized in corners of cells adjacent to the cambium prior to S1 formation, whereas non-condensed lignin subunits became labelled only in later stages - in secondary walls near cell corners and simultaneously with the completion of S1 formation. As S2 polysaccharide deposition progressed, the labelling extended towards the lumen. Labelling of peroxidases revealed their presence in cell corner regions of young xylem cells, still lacking a secondary wall, implying that peroxidases are incorporated into the developing cell wall at early developmental stages. A weak labelling of middle lamella regions and secondary walls could also be seen at later stages. The results are discussed in relation to current knowledge on the succession of polysaccharide and lignin deposition in woody cell walls.  相似文献   

5.
Plant cell walls are comprised largely of the polysaccharides cellulose, hemicellulose, and pectin, along with ∼10% protein and up to 40% lignin. These wall polymers interact covalently and noncovalently to form the functional cell wall. Characterized cross-links in the wall include covalent linkages between wall glycoprotein extensins between rhamnogalacturonan II monomer domains and between polysaccharides and lignin phenolic residues. Here, we show that two isoforms of a purified Arabidopsis thaliana arabinogalactan protein (AGP) encoded by hydroxyproline-rich glycoprotein family protein gene At3g45230 are covalently attached to wall matrix hemicellulosic and pectic polysaccharides, with rhamnogalacturonan I (RG I)/homogalacturonan linked to the rhamnosyl residue in the arabinogalactan (AG) of the AGP and with arabinoxylan attached to either a rhamnosyl residue in the RG I domain or directly to an arabinosyl residue in the AG glycan domain. The existence of this wall structure, named ARABINOXYLAN PECTIN ARABINOGALACTAN PROTEIN1 (APAP1), is contrary to prevailing cell wall models that depict separate protein, pectin, and hemicellulose polysaccharide networks. The modified sugar composition and increased extractability of pectin and xylan immunoreactive epitopes in apap1 mutant aerial biomass support a role for the APAP1 proteoglycan in plant wall architecture and function.  相似文献   

6.
Cell wall-related nucleotide sugar transporters (NSTs) theoretically supply the cytosolic nucleotide sugars for glycosyltransferases (GTs) to carry out ploysaccharide synthesis and modification in the Golgi apparatus. However, the regulation of cell wall synthesis by NSTs remains undescribed. Recently, we have reported the functional characterization of Oryza sativa nucleotide sugar transport (Osnst1) mutant and its corresponding gene. OsNST1/BC14 is localized in the Golgi apparatus and transports UDP-glucose. This mutant provides us with a unique opportunity for evaluation of its broad impacts on cell wall structure and components. We previously examined cell wall composition of bc14 and wild type plants. Here, the spatial distribution of these cell wall alterations was analyzed by immunolabeling approach. Analysis of the sugar yield in different cell wall fractions indicated that this mutation improves the extractability of cell wall components. Field emission scanning electron microscopy further showed that the orientation of microfibrils in bc14 is irregular when compared to that in wild type. Therefore, this UDP-glucose transporter, making substrates available for polysaccharide biosynthesis, plays a critical role in maintaining cell wall integrity.Key words: UDP-glucose transporter, Golgi apparatus, cell wall polysaccharides, xylan, riceNucleotide sugars mainly generated in cytosol are the substrates for the synthesis of cell wall polysaccharides. Supply of nucleotide sugars is thus a key level for regulation of cell wall components and structure. Mutation in MUR1, an isoform of GDP-D-mannose-4,6-dehydratase, causes reduced amount of GDP-fucose and abnormal xyloglucan structure.1,2 Disturbance of UDP-rhamnose synthesis via the mutation in RHM2/MUM4 decreases the rhamnogalacturonan I contents in Arabidopsis seeds. Cellulose synthase catalytic subunits (CESAs) generally use cytosolic UDP-glucoses to synthesize cellulose on the plasma membrane. UDP-glucose can be produced either via the catalysis of sucrose by sucrose synthase (SuSy) or through the phosphorylation of glucose-1-phosphate by UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (UGPase).3 Suppression of SuSy function in cotton inhibited fiber initiation and elongation.4 For the synthesis of noncellulosic polysaccharides occurring inside the Golgi lumen, the cytosolic nucleotide sugars should be translocated inwards by Golgi nucleotide sugar transporters (NSTs).5 However, this hypothesis remains to be confirmed, although transport activities have been identified in some plant NSTs.610 Altering the precursor supply may also affect the overall carbon allocation in plants. It is reasonable that substrate regulation often causes pleiotropic effects on cell wall biosynthesis and plant growth. Without genetic resources or mutants on cell wall related NST, the exact evaluation of NSTs'' impacts on cell wall structure and composition is largely delayed. Until recently, we identified a Golgi-localized transporter OsNST1 mutant in rice. This transporter has been found to supply UDP-glucose for the formation of matrix polysaccharides, thereby modulating cellulose biosynthesis.11 Here, we examine these alterations of cell wall polymers at the cellular level. The orientation of cellulose microfibrils and extractability of wall polysaccharides were also compared between the mutant and wild type. All those further our understandings of the functions of NSTs and the synergetic synthesis of different polymers.  相似文献   

7.
A technique of centrifuging pea epicotyl sections which extracts water-soluble cell wall polysaccharides with less than 1.5% cytoplasmic contamination as revealed by malate dehydrogenase activity determinations was developed. Tests for protein, hexose, pentose, and malate dehydrogenase indicate that significant damage to the cells occurs above 3,000g. Below this force, there is little damage, as evidenced by the similar growth rates of centrifuged and noncentrifuged sections. Centrifugation at 1,000g extracts polysaccharides containing rhamnose, fucose, arabinose, xylose, mannose, galactose, and glucose. An increase in xylose and glucose, presumably xyloglucan, is induced by treating sections with indoleacetic acid. Much of the alcohol-insoluble, water-soluble polysaccharide within the wall is extractable by centrifugation, since nearly as much arabinose and xylose are extractable by centrifugation as by homogenization. The utility of this method for the study of cell wall metabolism is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
《Carbohydrate research》1985,138(1):109-126
3-Deoxy-d-manno-2-octulosonic acid (KDO), a sugar previously presumed to occur only as a glycosyl residue in polysaccharides produced by Gram-negative bacteria, was found to be a component of the cell walls of higher plants. In the form of the disaccharide α-l-Rhap-(1→5)-d-KDO, KDO was released by mild hydrolysis with acid from the purified cell wall polysaccharide rhamnogalacturonan II. KDO was shown to be present in purified cell walls of several plants, including dicots, a monocot, and a gymnosperm. Improved methods for detecting and quantitating KDO residues in polysaccharides were developed during this investigation.  相似文献   

9.
Non-embryogenic cells (NEC) and embryogenc cells (EC) were separated from cell clusters derived from the hypocotyl segments of celery seedlings, which had been suspension-cultured in MS medium supplemented with 105 M 2,4-D. The EC formed globular embryos in medium without 2,4-D. The globular embryo developed through heart-shaped, torpedo to cotyledonary embryos within 10 days. The EC and developing embryos were fractionated into symplastic [MeOH, hot water (HW), starch (S)] and apoplastic [pectin, hemicellulose, TFA (trifluoroacetic acid)-soluble and cellulose] fractions. The EC contained lower levels of sugar in the MeOH fraction and higher levels of starch than NEC. In the apoplastic fractions, there were no differences of total sugar amounts between NEC and EC. Cellulose contents were about 10% of the wall polysaccharides. During somatic embryogenesis, total sugar contents of the MeOH and HW fractions increased till the heart-shaped embryo stage, and then decreased during the torpedo and cotyledonary embryo stages. The sugar contents of the starch, pectin, TFA-soluble, and cellulose fractions did not change during the stages mentioned above. However, the hemicellulose substances remarkably increased during embryogenesis, and then decreased as the development proceeded. The neutral sugar components of the hemicellulosic fractions were analyzed. Arabinose increased markedly in EC to the globular embryo stage, but decreased as the development proceeded. Galactose increased only at the torpedo and cotyledonary embryo stages. Xylose was present at lower levels in all stages of embryogenesis than in the differentiated hypocotyl cell walls. These results suggest that there was a high turnover of arabinogalactan polysaccharides during embryogenesis, and that xylan accumulated in the cell walls of differentiated cells  相似文献   

10.
Vegetative fronds of Spirodela polyrrhiza were induced to form dormant turions by the addition of 1 micromolar abscisic acid or by shading. The cell wall polymers of fronds contained a high proportion of the branched-chain pentose, d-apiose (about 20% of total noncellulosic wall sugar residues), whereas turion cell walls contained only trace amounts (about 0.2%). When the fronds were fed d-[3H]glucuronic acid for 30 minutes, the accumulated UDP-[3H]apiose pool accounted for about 27% of the total phosphorylated [3H]pentose derivatives; in turions, the UDP-[3H]apiose pool accounted for only about 4% of the total phosphorylated [3H]pentose derivatives. We conclude that the developmentally regulated decrease in the biosynthesis of a wall polysaccharide during turion formation involves a reduction in the supply of the relevant sugar nucleotide. One controlling enzyme activity is suggested to be UDP-apiose/UDP-xylose synthase. However, since there was a 100-fold decrease in the rate of polysaccharide synthesis and only a 9-fold decrease in UDP-apiose accumulation, there is probably also control of the activity of the relevant polysaccharide synthase.  相似文献   

11.
Plant cell walls play a major role in the outcome of host-parasite interactions. Wall fragments released from the plant, and/or the fungal pathogen, can act respectively as endogenous and exogenous elicitors of the defence response, and other wall components, such as callose, lignin, or hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins, can inhibit pathogen penetration and/or spreading. We have previously demonstrated that calli from tomato cultivars resistant in vivo to Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. lycopersici show a high amount of polysaccharides in vitro. The aim of the present work was to assess the possible role of polysaccharide content and/or synthetic capacity in determining the competence of plant cells for active defence. For this purpose, tomato cell clones with increased and decreased polysaccharide (FL+, FL-) and callose (A+, A-) content have been selected by means of specific stains as visual markers and tested for the effect of these changes on the extent of response to Fusarium. The analysis of several parameters known to be indicative of active defence (cell browning after elicitor treatment, peroxidase and -glucanase induction and inhibition of fungal growth in dual culture) clearly shows that FL+ and A+ clones have acquired an increased competence for the activation of defence response. The results are thoroughly discussed in terms of an evaluation of the relative importance of constitutive and/or inducible polysaccharide synthetic capacity for plant response to pathogens, and their possible regulation by plant physiological backgrounds.  相似文献   

12.
Nock LP  Smith CJ 《Plant physiology》1987,84(4):1044-1050
Cell walls of Zea mays (cv L.G.11) seedlings labeled with 14C were treated with α-amylase from Bacillus subtilis to remove starch and mixed linkage glucans. These walls released arabinose, xylose, galactose, and galacturonic acid in addition to glucose when they were allowed to autolyze. Methylation analysis was performed on samples of wall which had been incubated autolytically and the results indicated that degradation of the major polymer of the wall, the glucoarabinoxylan, had occurred. A number of glycanases could be dissociated from the wall by use of 3 m LiCL. The proteins which were released were found to contain a number of exoglycosidase activities in addition to being effective in degrading the polysaccharide substrates, araban, xylan, galactan, laminarin, mannan, and polygalacturonic acid. The effects of these enzymes on the wall during autolysis appear to result from endo-activity in addition to exo-activity. The structural changes that occurred in the cell walls during autolysis were found to be related to the changes previously found to occur in cell walls during auxin induced extension.  相似文献   

13.
The current interest in cell wall biosynthesis is expanding because of the increasing evidence that the properties of the cell wall mediate cellular interactions during growth, development and differentiation. Much effort has been put forward to the identification of glycosyltransferases because of their obvious importance in polysaccharide synthesis. Enzymes involved in nucleotide sugar production and transport are also important because of the potential to manipulate the composition of cell walls through substrate level control. Molecular genetics have begun to uncover genes for important enzymes in polysaccharide biosynthesis including glycosyltransferases and enzymes of nucleotide sugar metabolism; but at this time, much is inferred from comparisons to bacteria, yeast and animal cells. This review examines the production and transport of nucleotide sugars, the protein structure of glycosyltransferases, and implications for the cellular mechanisms of cell wall biosynthesis.  相似文献   

14.
Most glycosylation reactions require activated glycosyl donors in the form of nucleotide sugars to drive processes such as posttranslational modifications and polysaccharide biosynthesis. Most plant cell wall polysaccharides are biosynthesized in the Golgi apparatus from cytosolic-derived nucleotide sugars, which are actively transferred into the Golgi lumen by nucleotide sugar transporters (NSTs). An exception is UDP-xylose, which is biosynthesized in both the cytosol and the Golgi lumen by a family of UDP-xylose synthases. The NST-based transport of UDP-xylose into the Golgi lumen would appear to be redundant. However, employing a recently developed approach, we identified three UDP-xylose transporters in the Arabidopsis thaliana NST family and designated them UDP-XYLOSE TRANSPORTER1 (UXT1) to UXT3. All three transporters localize to the Golgi apparatus, and UXT1 also localizes to the endoplasmic reticulum. Mutants in UXT1 exhibit ∼30% reduction in xylose in stem cell walls. These findings support the importance of the cytosolic UDP-xylose pool and UDP-xylose transporters in cell wall biosynthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Caldicellulosiruptor bescii efficiently degrades cellulose, xylan, and native grasses at high temperatures above 70°C under anaerobic conditions. C. bescii extracellularly secretes multidomain glycoside hydrolases along with proteins of unknown function. In this study, we analyzed the C. bescii proteins that bind to the cell walls of timothy grass by using mass spectrometry, and we identified four noncatalytic plant cell wall-binding proteins (PWBPs) with high pI values (9.2 to 9.6). A search of a conserved domain database showed that these proteins possess a common domain related to solute-binding proteins. In addition, 12 genes encoding PWBP-like proteins were detected in the C. bescii genomic sequence. To analyze the binding properties of PWBPs, recombinant PWBP57 and PWBP65, expressed in Escherichia coli, were prepared. The PWBPs displayed a wide range of binding specificities: they bound to cellulose, lichenan, xylan, arabinoxylan, glucuronoxylan, mannan, glucomannan, pectin, oligosaccharides, and the cell walls of timothy grass. The proteins showed the highest binding affinity for the plant cell wall, with association constant (Ka) values of 5.2 × 106 to 44 × 106 M−1 among the insoluble polysaccharides tested, as measured using depletion binding isotherms. Affinity gel electrophoresis demonstrated that the proteins bound to the acidic polymer pectin most strongly among the soluble polysaccharides tested. Fluorescence microscopic analysis showed that the proteins bound preferentially to the cell wall in a section of grass leaf. Binding of noncatalytic PWBPs with high pI values might be necessary for efficient utilization of polysaccharides by C. bescii at high temperatures.  相似文献   

16.
Evaluation of biomass crops for breeding or pricing purposes requires an assay that predicts performance in the bioenergy conversion process. Cell wall polysaccharide hydrolysis was compared for a dilute sulfuric acid pretreatment at 121°C followed with cellulase hydrolysis for 72?h conversion assay (CONV) with in vitro rumen microflora incubation for 72?h (RUMEN) for a set of maize (Zea mays L.) stover samples with a wide range in cell wall composition. Residual polysaccharides from the assays were analyzed for sugar components and extent of hydrolysis calculated. Cell wall polysaccharide hydrolysis was different for all sugar components between the CONV and RUMEN assays. The CONV assay hydrolyzed xylose-, arabinose-, galactose-, and uronic acid-containing polysaccharides to a greater degree than did the RUMEN assay, whereas the RUMEN assay was more effective at hydrolyzing glucose- and mannose-containing polysaccharides. Greater hydrolysis of hemicelluloses and pectins by CONV can be attributed to the acid hydrolysis mechanism of the CONV assay for noncellulosic polysaccharides, whereas the RUMEN assay was dependent on enzymatic hydrolysis. While CONV and RUMEN hydrolysis were correlated for most polysaccharide components, the greatest correlation was only r?=?0.70 for glucose-containing polysaccharides. Linear correlations and multiple regressions indicated that polysaccharide hydrolysis by the RUMEN assay was negatively associated with lignin concentration and ferulate ether cross linking as expected. Corresponding correlations and regressions for CONV were less consistent and occasionally positive. Use of rumen microbial hydrolysis to characterize biomass performance in a conversion process may have some limited usefulness for genetic evaluations, but such assays would be unreliable for biomass pricing.  相似文献   

17.
The carbonyl content of a pectic polysaccharide from Sphagnum papillosum (sphagnan) and periodate oxidised alginates was investigated using three different carbonyl labelling strategies combined with size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) with multi-angle laser light scattering (MALLS) and on-line fluorescence or off-line tritium detection. The labelling strategies were tritium incorporation via NaB3H4 reduction, and fluorescent labelling with carbazole carbonyl oxyamine (CCOA), or 2-aminobenzamide (2-AB), respectively. Carbonyl quantification was based on labelled pullulan, dextran and alginate standards possessing only the reducing end carbonyl group. As a result the carbonyl distribution in the polysaccharides could be determined. In sphagnan it was found that the carbonyl content increased with increasing molecular weight, whereas in periodate oxidised alginate the carbonyl content was as expected independent of the molecular weight. The methods proved useful for carbonyl detection in water soluble polysaccharides in general. The tritium incorporation method was preferred for alkali stable polysaccharides, while the CCOA method was most suitable for acid stable polysaccharides with low carbonyl content. The 2-AB method is applicable for all polysaccharides tested with varying carbonyl content; however, it lacks the ability to detect ketone functionalities.  相似文献   

18.
Changes in Cell Wall Composition during Ripening of Grape Berries   总被引:7,自引:1,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Cell walls were isolated from the mesocarp of grape (Vitis vinifera L.) berries at developmental stages from before veraison through to the final ripe berry. Fluorescence and light microscopy of intact berries revealed no measurable change in cell wall thickness as the mesocarp cells expanded in the ripening fruit. Isolated walls were analyzed for their protein contents and amino acid compositions, and for changes in the composition and solubility of constituent polysaccharides during development. Increases in protein content after veraison were accompanied by an approximate 3-fold increase in hydroxyproline content. The type I arabinogalactan content of the pectic polysaccharides decreased from approximately 20 mol % of total wall polysaccharides to about 4 mol % of wall polysaccharides during berry development. Galacturonan content increased from 26 to 41 mol % of wall polysaccharides, and the galacturonan appeared to become more soluble as ripening progressed. After an initial decrease in the degree of esterification of pectic polysaccharides, no further changes were observed nor were there large variations in cellulose (30–35 mol % of wall polysaccharides) or xyloglucan (approximately 10 mol % of wall polysaccharides) contents. Overall, the results indicate that no major changes in cell wall polysaccharide composition occurred during softening of ripening grape berries, but that significant modification of specific polysaccharide components were observed, together with large changes in protein composition.  相似文献   

19.
E. G. Kirby  R. M. Roberts 《Planta》1971,99(3):211-221
Summary When 3H-L-fucose is provided to corn roots, a large proportion of the radioactivity is recovered in the polysaccharides extracted from the cell wall. Hydrolysis of this material yields 3H-L-fucose as the sole radioactive product. Two metabolites, identified tentatively as L-fucose-1-phosphate and a nucleoside diphosphate derivative of L-fucose have been isolated from the ethanol soluble fractions of the roots and are possibly precursors of the polysaccharide. Autoradiographs of tissue sections indicate that the synthesis of polysaccharides containing L-fucose is confined largely to the root-cap and epidermis. The outer epidermal wall and root-cap slime are particularly radioactive and, therefore, likely to be relatively rich in fucose. By contrast the cell walls from more deeply lying tissues incorporate negligible amounts of the sugar.  相似文献   

20.
A serologically active, acidic arabinomannan has been isolated from Mycobacterium smegmatis. The polysaccharide contains approximately 56 arabinosyl and 11 mannosyl residues, and 2 phosphate, 6 monoesterified succinate, and 4 ether-linked lactate groups. After saponification to remove succinyl groups, the polysaccharide can be separated into phosphorylated (55%) and nonphosphorylated (45%) forms, the former containing a little more arabinose and a little less mannose than the latter. The structures of these polysaccharides were investigated by 1H- and 13C-n.m.r. spectroscopy and methylation analysis, before and after selective cleavage of furanosyl linkages. The phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated forms of the polysaccharide were found to have similar, if not identical, structures. The main structural feature of the polysaccharides is the presence of chains of contiguous arabinofuranosyl residues linked α-(1→5). These chains are attached at O-4 of arabinopyranosyl residues that are present in a core region of the polysaccharide that also contains mannopyranosyl residues. Immunochemical studies demonstrated that the polysaccharide is an effective, precipitating antigen with antisera from rabbits immunized with cell walls or heat-killed cells of M. smegmatis. The polysaccharide is, however, more effective as a precipitating antigen after removal of the succinate groups, and completely ineffective after removal of arabinofuranosyl residues. The polysaccharide therefore contains an important antigen in common with the arabinogalactan lipopolysaccharide of the cell wall of the bacterium, i.e., chains of contiguous α-(1→5)-linked arabinofuranosyl residues.  相似文献   

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