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1.
A particulate enzymatic preparation, extracted from fenugreek seedlings (Trigonella foenum-graecum) catalyses the transfer of mannose from guanosine diphosphate-[U-14C]mannose and its incorporation into an alkali-soluble polysaccharide. Chemical and enzymatic study of this polysaccharide reveals the presence of only one type of osidic linkage, namely β-(1 → 4)-s-mannopyranosyl. The influence of some factors on this biosynthesis was studied, as well as the MW of the polysaccharide and the existence of an endogenous acceptor.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Most cell wall components are carbohydrate including the major matrix polysaccharides, pectins and hemicelluloses, and the arabinogalactan-protein proteoglycans. Both types of molecules are assembled in the Golgi apparatus and transported in secretory vesicles to the cell surface. We have employed antibodies specific to -(16) and -(14)-D-galactans, present in plant cell wall polysaccharides, in conjunction with immunofluorescence and electron microscopy to determine the location of the galactan-containing components in the cell wall and Golgi stacks of flax root tip tissues. Immunofluorescence data show that -(14)-D-galactan epitopes are restricted to peripheral cells of the root cap. These epitopes are not expressed in meristematic and columella cells. In contrast, -(16)-D-galactan epitopes are found in all cell types of flax roots. Immunogold labeling experiments show that both epitopes are specifically located within the wall immediately adjacent to the plasma membrane. They are also detected in Golgi cisternae and secretory vesicles, which indicates the involvement of the Golgi apparatus in their synthesis and transport. These findings demonstrate that the synthesis and localization of -(14)-D-galactan epitopes are highly regulated in developing flax roots and that different -linked D-galactans associated with cell wall polysaccharides are expressed in a cell type-specific manner.  相似文献   

3.
Properties of a β-(1→4)-glucan hydrolase from Aspergillus niger   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
1. A beta-(1-->4)-glucan hydrolase prepared from Aspergillus niger, as described by Clarke & Stone (1965a), showed a pH optimum in the range 4.5-6 and K(m) 0.25% when acting on a cellulose dextrin sulphate substrate. 2. The hydrolase rapidly decreased the specific viscosity of carboxymethylcellulose with a small increase in the production of reducing sugars. The identity of the products of hydrolysis of cellotetraose, cellopentaose and their reduced analogues indicate a preferential cleavage of non-terminal glucosidic linkages. The enzyme may be described as beta-(1-->4)-glucan 4-glucanohydrolase (EC 3.2.1.4). 3. In addition to carboxymethylcellulose, cellulose dextrins, cellopentaose and cellotetraose the enzyme fraction hydrolysed lichenin, oat and barley glucans, ivory-nut mannan and a glucomannan from Konjak flour. No hydrolysis of wheat-straw beta-(1-->4)-xylan, Lupinus albus beta-(1-->4)-galactan, pneumococcal type III polysaccharide, chitin, hyaluronic acid, laminarin, pachydextrins, carboxymethylpachyman or beta-(1-->3)-oligoglucosides was detected. 4. The hydrolase showed no transglycosylase activity from cellodextrin or cellopentaose substrates to glucose or methanol acceptors. 5. The hydrolysis of cellodextrins was inhibited completely by 1.0mm-Hg(2+), 0.7mm-phenylmercuric nitrate and 1.0mm-iodine.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The synthesis of a tetra ??(1→5) galactofuranoside was achieved using a thioglycoside donor with a methyl tert-butyl phenyl thio leaving group. This tetrasaccharide was conjugated to biotin and validated as antigen with the monoclonal antibody used for clinical detection of Aspergillus fumigatus galactomannan on streptavidin-coated microplates. Then we have shown its ability to detect antibodies associated with A. fumigatus induced disease by using sera from patients with Allergic broncho-pulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) and correlated the results of antibody detection with those gained with a commercially available diagnostic test.  相似文献   

6.
1. A barley glucan with 68% of beta-(1-->4)-linkages and 32% of beta-(1-->3)-linkages was exhaustively hydrolysed with an Aspergillus niger beta-(1-->4)-glucan 4-glucanohydrolase (EC 3.2.1.4) (Clarke & Stone, 1965b). The hydrolysis products were separated and estimated. 2. The lower-molecular-weight products were identified as: glucose, 1.4%; cellobiose, 11.9%; 3(2)-O-beta-glucosylcellobiose, 45.0%; a tetrasaccharide(s), which was a substituted cellobiose, 16.4%. A series of unidentified higher-molecular-weight products (26.5%) were also found. 3. The identity of the products suggests that the A. niger beta-(1-->4)-glucan hydrolase hydrolyses beta-glucosidic linkages joining 4-O-substituted glucose residues. 4. When an enzyme fraction containing the beta-(1-->4)-glucan hydrolase and an exo-beta-(1-->3)-glucan hydrolase was used, the same products were found, but the higher-molecular-weight products were observed to have only a transient existence in the hydrolysate and were virtually absent after prolonged incubation. It is suggested that these oligosaccharides are resistant to attack by beta-(1-->4)-glucan hydrolase but are partially hydrolysed by the exo-beta-(1-->3)-glucan hydrolase and therefore possess one or more (1-->3)-linked glucose residues at their non-reducing end.  相似文献   

7.
Two different glucans (PS-I, water-soluble; and PS-II, water-insoluble) were isolated from the alkaline extract of fruit bodies of an edible mushroom Calocybe indica. On the basis of acid hydrolysis, methylation analysis, periodate oxidation, and NMR analysis ((1)H, (13)C, DEPT-135, TOCSY, DQF-COSY, NOESY, ROESY, HMQC, and HMBC), the structure of the repeating unit of these polysaccharides were established as: PS-I: →6)-β-D-Glcp-(1→6)-β-D-glcp-(1→6)-)-β-D-Glcp-(1→ α-D=Glcp (Water-soluble glucan). PS-II: →3)-β-D-Glcp-(1→3)-β-D-glcp-(1→3)-)-β-D-Glcp-(1→3)-β-D-Glcp-(1→ β-D-Glcp (Water-insoluble glucan, Calocyban).  相似文献   

8.
Immunogold labeling was used to study the distribution of (1 → 3)-β-glucans and (1 → 3, 1 → 4)-β-glucans in the rice grain during cellularization of the endosperm. At approximately 3–5 d after pollination the syncytial endosperm is converted into a cellular tissue by three developmentally distinct types of wall. The initial free-growing anticlinal walls, which compartmentalize the syncytium into open-ended alveoli, are formed in the absence of mitosis and phragmoplasts. This stage is followed by unidirectional (centripetal) growth of the anticlinal walls mediated by adventitious phragmoplasts that form between adjacent interphase nuclei. Finally, the periclinal walls that divide the alveoli are formed in association with centripetally expanding interzonal phragmoplasts following karyokinesis. The second and third types of wall are formed alternately until the endosperm is cellular throughout. All three types of wall that cellularize the endosperm contain (1 → 3)-β-glucans but not (1 → 3, 1 → 4)-β-glucans, whereas cell walls in the surrounding maternal tissues contain considerable amounts of (1 → 3, 1 → 4)-β-glucans with (1 → 3)-β-glucans present only around plasmodesmata. The callosic endosperm walls remain thin and cell plate-like throughout the cellularization process, appearing to exhibit a prolonged juvenile state. Received: 7 January 1997 / Accepted: 11 February 1997  相似文献   

9.
1. The components of an enzyme preparation from Aspergillus niger, which hydrolysed substrates containing beta-(1-->3)- and beta-(1-->4)-glucosidic linkages, were separated by calcium phosphate and Dowex 1 column chromatography. 2. The hydrolytic activity of each fraction from both types of column towards laminaribiose, laminarin, carboxymethylpachyman, pachydextrins, salicin, cellobiose, cellopentaose and swollen cellulose was tested. 3. The activity towards the beta-(1-->3)-glucosidic substrates was found in three well-separated groups of fractions. The differences in action pattern of these groups is discussed. 4. Preparative-scale chromatography that enabled the separation of a beta-(1-->4)-glucan-glucanohydrolase component substantially free of activity towards beta-(1-->3)-glucosidic substrates is described. Residual beta-(1-->3)-glucan-hydrolase activity was removed by adsorption on to insoluble laminarin at pH3.5.  相似文献   

10.
Xylans from five seaweeds belonging to the order Nemaliales (Galaxaura marginata, Galaxaura obtusata, Tricleocarpacylindrica, Tricleocarpa fragilis, and Scinaia halliae) and one of the order Palmariales (Palmaria palmata) collected on the Brazilian coasts were extracted with hot water and purified from acid xylomannans and/or xylogalactans through Cetavlon precipitation of the acid polysaccharides. The β-D-(1→4), β-D-(1→3) 'mixed linkage' structures were determined using methylation analysis and 1D and 2D NMR spectroscopy. The presence of large sequences of β-(1→4)-linked units suggests transient aggregates of ribbon- or helical-ordered structures that would explain the low optical rotations.  相似文献   

11.
Gibberellins (GAs) A9, A15, A19, A20, A29, A35, A44, A50 and A61 were identified by capillary gas chromatography/selected ion monitoring (GC/SIM) in immature seeds of loquat (Eriobotrya japonica Lindl). Furthermore, five unknown GA-like compounds with apparent parent ions of m/z 418, 504 or 506 (as methyl ester trimethylsilyl ether derivatives) were found by GC/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) in the biologically active fractions. The m/z 418 and 504 compounds may have been C-11β hydroxylated GA9 and dehydro-GA35, respectively. The bioassay and GC/MS results suggest that the major GAs were GA50 and the five unknown GA-like compounds. In the immature seeds, at least two GA metabolic pathways may thus exist, one being the non-hydroxylation pathway of GA15→GA24→GA9, and the other, the early C-13 hydroxylation pathway of GA44→GA19→GA20→GA29. A late C-11β hydroxylation pathway is also possible.  相似文献   

12.
An endo-(14)--d-xylanase from Neocallimastix frontalis was purified by anion-exchange chromatography. The enzyme had an apparent molecular mass of 30 kDa on SDS-PAGE and exhibited maximum activity at 50°C and at pH values between 6.0 and 6.6. Kinetic studies on the hydrolysis of xylo-oligosaccharides, ranging from xylobiose to xylodecaose, showed that xylohexaose and xyloheptaose were the preferred substrates for the enzyme and that xylobiose, xylotriose and xylotetraose were not hydrolysed. Xylose was not a product of the hydrolysis of any of the xylo-oligosaccharide substrates tested. The enzyme appeared to have a strong preference for the hydrolysis of the internal glycosidic bonds of the oligosaccharides, which is typical of endo-(14)--d-xylanase activity, but it differed from other fungal endo-(14)--d-xylanases in that it had uniform action on the various internal linkages in the xylo-oligosaccharides.V. Garcia-Campayo, S.I. McCrae and T.M. Wood are with The Rowett Research Institute, Greenburn Road, Bucksburn, Aberdeen AB2 9SB, UK  相似文献   

13.
A structural study of the cell wall polysaccharides of Myrmecia biatorellae, the symbiotic algal partner of the lichenized fungus Lobaria linita was carried out. It produced a rhamnogalactofuranan, with a (1→6)-β-d-galactofuranose in the main-chain, substituted at O-2 by single units of β-d-Galf, α-l-Rhap or by side chains of 2-O-linked β-d-Galf units. The structure of the polysaccharide was established by chemical and NMR spectroscopic analysis, and is new among natural polysaccharides. Moreover, in a preliminary study, this polysaccharide increased the lethality of mice submitted to polymicrobial sepsis induced by cecal ligation and puncture, probably due to the presence of galactofuranose, which have been shown to be highy immunogenic in mammals.  相似文献   

14.
Philippe S  Saulnier L  Guillon F 《Planta》2006,224(2):449-461
Arabinoxylans (AX) and (1→3),(1→4)-β-glucans are major components of wheat endosperm cell walls. Their chemical heterogeneity has been described but little is known about the sequence of their deposition in cell walls during endosperm development. The time course and pattern of deposition of the (1→3) and (1→3),(1→4)-β-glucans and AX in the endosperm cell walls of wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Recital) during grain development was studied using specific antibodies. At approximately 45°D (degree-days) after anthesis the developing walls contained (1→3)-β-glucans but not (1→3),(1→4)-β-glucans. In contrast, (1→3),(1→4)-β-glucans occurred widely in the walls of maternal tissues. At the end of the cellularization stage (72°D), (1→3)-β-glucan epitopes disappeared and (1→3),(1→4)-β-glucans were found equally distributed in all thin walls of wheat endosperm. The AX were detected at the beginning of differentiation (245°D) in wheat endosperm, but were missing in previous stages. However, epitopes related to AX were present in nucellar epidermis and cross cells surrounding endosperm at all stages but not detected in the maternal outer tissues. As soon as the differentiation was apparent, the cell walls exhibited a strong heterogeneity in the distribution of polysaccharides within the endosperm.  相似文献   

15.
16.
We have purified haemoglobin Philly by isoelectric focusing on polyacrylamide gel, and studied its oxygen equilibrium, proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectra, mechanical stability, and pH-dependent u.v. difference spectrum. Stripped haemoglobin Philly binds oxygen non-co-operatively with high affinity. Inorganic phosphate and 2,3-diphosphoglycerate have little effect on the equilibrium curve, but inositol hexaphosphate lowers the affinity and induces co-operativity. These properties are explained by the nuclear magnetic resonance spectra which show that stripped deoxyhaemoglobin Philly has the quaternary oxy structure and that inositol hexaphosphate converts it to the deoxy structure. An exchangeable proton resonance at ?8.3 p.p.m. from water, which is present in oxy- and deoxyhaemoglobin A, is absent in both these derivatives of haemoglobin Philly and can therefore be assigned to one of the hydrogen bonds made by tyrosine C1-(35)β, probably the one to aspartate H8(126)α at the α1β1 contact. Haemoglobin Philly shows the same pH-dependent u.v. difference spectrum as haemoglobin A, only weaker, so that a tyrosine other than 35β must be mainly responsible for this.  相似文献   

17.
Contractile cell walls are found in various plant organs and tissues such as tendrils, contractile roots, and tension wood. The tension-generating mechanism is not known but is thought to involve special cell wall architecture. We previously postulated that tension could result from the entrapment of certain matrix polymers within cellulose microfibrils. As reported here, this hypothesis was corroborated by sequential extraction and analysis of cell wall polymers that are retained by cellulose microfibrils in tension wood and normal wood of hybrid aspen (Populus tremula × Populus tremuloides). β-(1→4)-Galactan and type II arabinogalactan were the main large matrix polymers retained by cellulose microfibrils that were specifically found in tension wood. Xyloglucan was detected mostly in oligomeric form in the alkali-labile fraction and was enriched in tension wood. β-(1→4)-Galactan and rhamnogalacturonan I backbone epitopes were localized in the gelatinous cell wall layer. Type II arabinogalactans retained by cellulose microfibrils had a higher content of (methyl)glucuronic acid and galactose in tension wood than in normal wood. Thus, β-(1→4)-galactan and a specialized form of type II arabinogalactan are trapped by cellulose microfibrils specifically in tension wood and, thus, are the main candidate polymers for the generation of tensional stresses by the entrapment mechanism. We also found high β-galactosidase activity accompanying tension wood differentiation and propose a testable hypothesis that such activity might regulate galactan entrapment and, thus, mechanical properties of cell walls in tension wood.Contractile cell walls found in plant organs and tissues such as tendrils, contractile roots, and tension wood (TW) have remarkable functions and properties. Their traits have been most intensely studied in TW of hardwoods, where they provide negative gravitropic response capacities to stems with secondary growth, as recently reviewed by Mellerowicz and Gorshkova (2012). These properties are conferred by TW fibers, which in many species contain a so-called gelatinous cell wall layer (G-layer; Norberg and Meier, 1966; Clair et al., 2008). G-layers are formed following the deposition of xylan-type secondary cell wall layer(s) and, thus, can be considered tertiary layers (Wardrop and Dadswell, 1948). They are almost or completely devoid of xylan and lignin and have very high cellulose contents (up to 85%). However, several other polymers appear to be present in TW G-layers, according to recent chemical analyses of isolated G-layers (Nishikubo et al., 2007; Kaku et al., 2009) and immunohistochemical labeling of TW sections (Arend, 2008; Bowling and Vaughn, 2008). Notably, xyloglucan (XG) has been found in G-layers of poplar (Populus spp.) TW (Nishikubo et al., 2007) and at the boundary between secondary cell wall layers (S-layers) and G-layers (Baba et al., 2009; Sandquist et al., 2010). It is also important for tension creation (Baba et al., 2009). However, it is not detectable in mature G-layers by monoclonal antibodies or XG-binding modules (Nishikubo et al., 2007; Baba et al., 2009; Sandquist et al., 2010).Structurally similar G-layers have been also identified in phloem fibers in many fibrous crops, such as flax (Linum usitatissimum), hemp (Cannabis sativa), and ramie (Boehmeria nivea; Gorshkova et al., 2012). These fibers occur in bundles that can be isolated for biochemical analysis. G-layers in fibers from diverse sources have a very similar structure, being largely composed of cellulose (with axial microfibril orientation, high degrees of crystallinity, and large crystallite sizes) lacking xylan and lignin (Mellerowicz et al., 2001; Pilate et al., 2004; Gorshkova et al., 2010, 2012) and having high water contents (Schreiber et al., 2010). In phloem fibers, the G-layers become very prominent, reaching thicknesses up to 15 µm and occupying over 90% of the cell wall’s total cross-sectional areas (Crônier et al., 2005). Pectic β-(1→4)-galactan with complex structures has been shown to be the major matrix polysaccharide of isolated phloem fibers in flax (Gorshkova et al., 2004; Gorshkova and Morvan, 2006; Gurjanov et al., 2007). Some of it is so strongly retained within cellulose that it cannot be extracted by concentrated alkali and can only be obtained after cellulose dissolution (Gurjanov et al., 2008). Such galactan, therefore, is a prime candidate for a polymer entrapped by cellulose microfibrils during crystallization that could substantially contribute to the contractile properties of cellulose in G-layers, according to recently formulated models (Mellerowicz et al., 2008; Mellerowicz and Gorshkova 2012). Furthermore, Roach et al. (2011) have shown that trimming of β-(1→4)-galactan by β-galactosidase is important for final cellulose crystallization, the formation of G-layer structure, and, hence, the stem’s mechanical properties.There is also immunocytochemical evidence for the presence of β-(1→4)-galactan and type II arabinogalactan (AG-II) in G-layers of TW fibers (Arend, 2008; Bowling and Vaughn, 2008). In addition, high-Mr branched galactans have been isolated from TW of Fagus sylvestris (Meier, 1962) and Fagus grandifolia (Kuo and Timell, 1969), with estimated degrees of polymerization (DP) of approximately 300 and complex structure, probably including both β-(1→4) and β-(1→6) linkages, although their exact nature remains unknown. Furthermore, Gal has been identified as one of the major sugars after Glc and Xyl in hydrolysates of isolated Populus spp. G-layers (Furuya et al., 1970; Nishikubo et al., 2007), and the Gal content of cell walls is a proposed indicator of the extent of TW development in beech (Fagus spp.; Ruel and Barnoud, 1978). However, subsequent linkage analyses identified only 2- and 3,6-linked Gal in poplar TW G-layers (Nishikubo et al., 2007), while in flax fibers, 4-linked Gal is the main component (Gorshkova et al., 1996, 2004; Gurjanov et al., 2007, 2008). Thus, the type(s) of galactans present in poplar TW remains unclear, and the galactans have not been shown previously either to have a rhamnogalacturonan-I (RG-I) backbone or to be strongly retained by cellulose microfibrils, as demonstrated for flax gelatinous fibers.To improve our understanding of cell wall properties in TW and their contraction mechanism, in the study presented here, we tested aspects of the recently proposed entrapment model (Mellerowicz et al., 2008; Mellerowicz and Gorshkova, 2012). According to this model, contraction is driven by the formation of larger cellulose structures, sometimes called macrofibrils, via interactions of cellulose microfibrils in the G-layer with each other and forming inclusions containing matrix polymers. This would induce tension within cellulose through the stretching of microfibrils required to surround the inclusions. The model is compatible with available data on the structure and action of gelatinous walls, but the main assumption, that polymers are trapped inside crystalline cellulose, such as that found in flax, has not been tested previously. Therefore, we compared matrix polymers retained by cellulose microfibrils in normal wood (NW) and TW of the model hardwood species hybrid aspen (Populus tremula × Populus tremuloides) that forms TW with gelatinous fibers. For this purpose, we used a combination of sequential cell wall extractions, similar to those used previously to characterize flax gelatinous fibers (Gurjanov et al., 2008), followed by fractionation of polymers by size-exclusion chromatography, immunological analyses, and oligosaccharide profiling by polysaccharide analysis using carbohydrate gel electrophoresis (PACE). The results reveal the main polymers of cellulose-retained fractions and key differences between NW and TW. Comparison of our results and previous findings also indicates that there are both similarities and differences in the constitution of gelatinous fibers in aspen and flax. An updated model of the contractile G-layer of TW fibers based on the data is presented.  相似文献   

18.
It has been shown that β-(1  3)-(1  4)-glucans (BG34) from barley and oats can trigger recognition and internalization by murine and human macrophages. Increasing evidence has suggested that macrophage recognition and internalization of BG34 are dramatically affected by the purity of BG34, the molecular weight and chemical modification. In this study, we investigated the structural features of BG34 for macrophage recognition and internalization. We prepared homogeneous BG34s of 10 kDa (BG34-10), 200 kDa (BG34-200) and 500 kDa (BG34-500) with high purity, and then introduced green fluorescence FITC to the reducing ends (Re) or main chain (Mc). The results of size exclusion chromatography, 13C NMR, fluorescence microscopy, FACS analyses and MTS assay demonstrated that non-toxic BG34 of 10 kDa (BG34-10) effectively trigger macrophage internalization. The internalization was adversely affected by modifying the main chain of BG34-10 but not the reducing end. Studies using blocking antibodies on several CD11b+ and CD11b? cells suggested that CD11b may play an important role in mediating macrophage internalization of BG34-10. Quantitative RT-PCR and intracellular cytokine stain revealed that macrophages generate increased level of CD11b and TNF-α in response to BG34-10. This study for the first time demonstrated the molecular size (10 kDa) and pattern of modification (reducing end modification) for BG34-10 to mediate macrophage internalization. Since BG34 is water soluble, biocompatible and biodegradable FDA-approved material, this mechanism of BG34-10 can be used to design drug delivery system targeting macrophages.  相似文献   

19.
The role of exposed tyrosine side-chains in enzyme-catalysed reactions has been studied for porcine-pancreatic alpha-amylase, sweet-potato beta-amylase, and Aspergillus niger glucamylase using N-acetylimidazole as the specific protein reagent. The changes in activity binding affinity (Δk?1/k+1), and kinetic parameters (Km,k2) due to acetylation of the phenolic hydroxyl groups have been determined. Acetylation of each enzyme occurred by an “apparent” first-order reaction with a rate constant of 0.72–1.4 x 10?1min?1. Acetylation increased the apparent Km (soluble starch as the substrate) for each enzyme (appreciably for alpha-amylase and glucamylase), whereas k2 remained unchanged. Similarly, for each enzyme, the binding affinity for immobilised cyclohexa-amylose decreased appreciably, whereas the catalytic activity was reduced only to a small degree (and remained unchanged for beta-amylase). It is concluded that the tyrosine groups located in the active centre of each enzyme have a substrate-binding function.  相似文献   

20.
An β-D-(l→3)-glucanase has been purified from the culture medium of Rhizopus niveus. The purification involves calcium acetate treatment, polyethylene glycol 6000 fractionation, CM-cellulose batch treatment, DEAE-cellulose column chromatography and gel filtration on Sephadex G–150.

The final preparation is homogenous on the basis of discelectrophoresis on acryl amide gel, sedimentation in the ultracentrifuge.

Some properties of the purified enzyme have been also tested.  相似文献   

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