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1.
The utility of plant secondary cell wall biomass for industrial and biofuel purposes depends upon improving cellulose amount, availability and extractability. The possibility of engineering such biomass requires much more knowledge of the genes and proteins involved in the synthesis, modification and assembly of cellulose, lignin and xylans. Proteomic data are essential to aid gene annotation and understanding of polymer biosynthesis. Comparative proteomes were determined for secondary walls of stem xylem and transgenic xylogenic cells of tobacco and detected peroxidase, cellulase, chitinase, pectinesterase and a number of defence/cell death related proteins, but not marker proteins of primary walls such as xyloglucan endotransglycosidase and expansins. Only the corresponding detergent soluble proteome of secretory microsomes from the xylogenic cultured cells, subjected to ion‐exchange chromatography, could be determined accurately since, xylem‐specific membrane yields were of poor quality from stem tissue. Among the 109 proteins analysed, many of the protein markers of the ER such as BiP, HSP70, calreticulin and calnexin were identified, together with some of the biosynthetic enzymes and associated polypeptides involved in polymer synthesis. However 53% of these endomembrane proteins failed identification despite the use of two different MS methods, leaving considerable possibilities for future identification of novel proteins involved in secondary wall polymer synthesis once full genomic data are available.  相似文献   

2.
When lignocellulosic biomass is utilized as a fermentative substrate to produce biochemicals, the existence of a yeast strain resistant to inhibitory chemical compounds (ICCs) released from the biomass becomes critical. To achieve the purpose, in this study, Saccharomyces yeast strains from a NBRC yeast culture collection were used for exploration and evaluated in two different media containing ICCs that mimic one another but resemble the hydrolysate of real biomass. Among them, S. cerevisiae F118 strain shows robustness upon the fermentation with unique flocculation trait that was strongly responsive to ICC stress. When this strain was cultured in the presence of ICCs, its cell wall hydrophobicity increased dramatically, and reduced significantly when the ICCs were depleted, demonstrating that cell-surface hydrophobicity can also act as an adaptive response to the ICCs. Cells from the strain with the highest cell-wall hydrophobicity displayed progressively stronger flocculation, indicating that the F118 strain is having unique robustness under ICC stress. Gene expression perturbation analysis revealed that mot3 gene encoding regulatory Mot3p from the F118 strain was expressed in response to the concentration of ICCs. This gene was found to control expression of ygp1 gene that encoding Ygp1p, one of cell wall proteins. Deep sequencing analysis revealed that the Mot3p of the F118 strain features a unique insertion and deletion of nucleotides that encode glutamine or asparagine residues, particularly in N-terminal domain, as determined by comparison to the Mot3p sequence from the S288c strain, which was employed as a control strain. Furthermore, the cell wall hydrophobicity of the S288c strain was greatly enhanced and became ICC-responsive after gene swapping with the mot3 gene from the F118 strain. The gene-swapped S288c strain fermented 6-fold faster than the wild-type strain, producing 14.5 g/L of ethanol from 30 g/L of glucose consumed within 24 h in a medium containing the ICCs. These such modifications to Mot3p in unique locations in its sequence have a potential to change the expression of a gene involved in cell wall hydrophobicity and boosted the flocculation response to ICC stress, allowing for the acquisition of extraordinary robustness.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Summary The fine structure of the pore cells in pre- and post-hatched Deroceras reticulatum is described. The cells have been divided into three main types on morphological grounds, one type being particularly rich in glycogen. Certain pore cells contain haemocyanin granules in grooves below cytoplasmic tongues, and in characteristic double-membrane-bounded vesicles within dilated cisternae of rough endoplasmic reticulum, as well as in other identified areas. All types of pore cells show fine fibres reminiscent of collagen associated with the basal lamina and pore complexes.In addition to acid phosphatase activity in lysosomes and Golgi elements, intra- and extracisternal activity has been demonstrated in association with the rough endoplasmic reticulum. The intracisternal activity is in close proximity to the Golgi apparatus and may represent enzyme that is about to enter the GERL system. Extracisternal activity may be associated with cellular lysis and death, or may represent local areas of degradation leading to cytodifferentiation. Remnants of lysed pore cells appear to be taken up by connective tissue amoebocytes.The authors wish to acknowledge the financial support of the Agricultural Research Council (G.B.) Grant No. AG 72/21, the photographic assistance of Mr. Nigel Green, and some technical assistance from Miss Jane Morgans  相似文献   

5.
Summary Cysts of the green algaAcetabularia develop a unique lid structure to enable the release of gametes. This lid is separated from the rest of the thick cellulose cell wall by a circular fault line formed within the fibrillar texture of the wall. By immunofluorescence microscopy, we show that, prior to the first division of the single cyst nucleus, the radially symmetrical, perinuclear microtubule system which is a remnant carried over from previous developmental stages of cyst morphogenesis transforms into a circular microtubule band (CMB) around the nucleus. This band consisting of only a few bundled microtubules beneath the plasma membrane encircles the cyst nucleus at a distance of 75 to 100m. In a previous fine structural study, a lid-forming apparatus (LFA) was described as a circular band of rod-like structures in the plane of the plasma membrane, demarcating the contour of the future lid. Both the CMB and the LFA are superimposed on the rim of the lid. We therefore propose that the microtubule band is a component of the LFA identical with the rod-like structures. Formation of the CMB and, hence, lid formation are blocked by the microtubule-specific herbicide Oryzalin but not by the actin filament-disrupting inhibitor cytochalasin D. Upon recovery from Oryzalin treatment, the nuclei but not the prospective sites of the CMBs serve as nucleation centers, indicating that the CMB is not formed by a pre-existing template in the plasma membrane. This suggests that the dynamic behavior of the microtubules within the perinuclear microtubule cytoskeleton gives rise to the CMB. Since the stage of CMB assembly marks the beginning of cell wall formation, it is proposed that the CMB determines the position of the lid by spatially controlling cell wall deposition. On the basis of current hypotheses, two scenarios for the role of the LFA/CMB in lid formation are discussed.Abbreviations CMB circular microtubule band - EGTA ethylene glycol bis-(-aminoethyl ether) N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - LFA lid-forming-apparatus - MAP microtubule-associated protein - MT microtubule - MTOC microtubuleorganizing center Dedicated to the memory of Professor Oswald Kiermayer  相似文献   

6.
Summary Geosiphon pyriforme, a consortium of aGlomiw-like fungus andNostoc spp., forms syncytial, up to 2 mm long bladders accommodating the endosymbiotic cyanobacteria. The bladders are bordered by an elastic cell wall and have a turgor of about 0.6 MPa, as measured by piercing them with oil filled microcapillaries within different osmolarities of sorbitol. In the presence of certain organic osmolytes in the surrounding medium, the bladders collapsed, i.e., showed cytorrhysis. We studied systematically the cytorrhytic effectivity of the diverse osmolytes in relation to their hydrodynamic molecule radii by a solute-exclusion method with living bladders and those which have been extracted by different methods. The results suggest that the cell wall of the bladders has an unusually small limiting pore size thus representing an effective diffusion barrier for glucose and is virtually impermeable for sucrose for at least 8 h. The pore radii of the cell wall are estimated to be about 0.5 nm. Na2CO3 extraction, frequently used to partially extract pectic substances from plant cell walls, strongly increases wall permeability. Electron microscopic observations show an electron-dense outer cell wall layer, perhaps responsible for the low permeability. The finding that the cell wall of theGeosiphon bladders represents an effective osmotic barrier provides not only new insights into the cell physiology ofGeosiphon but may also contribute more generally to a better understanding of the mechanisms of selectivity of transport across the cell walls of AM fungi.Abbreviations AM arbuscular mycorrhiza - DMSO dimethyl sulfoxyde - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - PEG polyethylene glycol - res Einstein-Stokes hydrodynamic radius  相似文献   

7.
8.
  • The distribution of homogalacturonans (HGAs) displaying different degrees of esterification as well as of callose was examined in cell walls of mature pavement cells in two angiosperm and two fern species. We investigated whether local cell wall matrix differentiation may enable pavement cells to respond to mechanical tension forces by transiently altering their shape.
  • HGA epitopes, identified with 2F4, JIM5 and JIM7 antibodies, and callose were immunolocalised in hand‐made or semithin leaf sections. Callose was also stained with aniline blue. The structure of pavement cells was studied with light and transmission electron microscopy (TEM).
  • In all species examined, pavement cells displayed wavy anticlinal cell walls, but the waviness pattern differed between angiosperms and ferns. The angiosperm pavement cells were tightly interconnected throughout their whole depth, while in ferns they were interconnected only close to the external periclinal cell wall and intercellular spaces were developed between them close to the mesophyll. Although the HGA epitopes examined were located along the whole cell wall surface, the 2F4‐ and JIM5‐ epitopes were especially localised at cell lobe tips. In fern pavement cells, the contact sites were impregnated with callose and JIM5‐HGA epitopes. When tension forces were applied on leaf regions, the pavement cells elongated along the stretching axis, due to a decrease in waviness of anticlinal cell walls. After removal of tension forces, the original cell shape was resumed.
  • The presented data support that HGA epitopes make the anticlinal pavement cell walls flexible, in order to reversibly alter their shape. Furthermore, callose seems to offer stability to cell contacts between pavement cells, as already suggested in photosynthetic mesophyll cells.
  相似文献   

9.
The major fungal pathogen Candida albicans can occupy diverse microenvironments in its human host. During colonization of the gastrointestinal or urogenital tracts, mucosal surfaces, bloodstream, and internal organs, C. albicans thrives in niches that differ with respect to available nutrients and local environmental stresses. Although most studies are performed on glucose‐grown cells, changes in carbon source dramatically affect cell wall architecture, stress responses, and drug resistance. We show that growth on the physiologically relevant carboxylic acid, lactate, has a significant impact on the C. albicans cell wall proteome and secretome. The regulation of cell wall structural proteins (e.g. Cht1, Phr1, Phr2, Pir1) correlated with extensive cell wall remodeling in lactate‐grown cells and with their increased resistance to stresses and antifungal drugs, compared with glucose‐grown cells. Moreover, changes in other proteins (e.g. Als2, Gca1, Phr1, Sap9) correlated with the increased adherence and biofilm formation of lactate‐grown cells. We identified mating and pheromone‐regulated proteins that were exclusive to lactate‐grown cells (e.g. Op4, Pga31, Pry1, Scw4, Yps7) as well as mucosa‐specific and other niche‐specific factors such as Lip4, Pga4, Plb5, and Sap7. The analysis of the corresponding null mutants confirmed that many of these proteins contribute to C. albicans adherence, stress, and antifungal drug resistance. Therefore, the cell wall proteome and secretome display considerable plasticity in response to carbon source. This plasticity influences important fitness and virulence attributes known to modulate the behavior of C. albicans in different host microenvironments during infection.  相似文献   

10.
To study the function of xyloglucan endotransglycosylase (XET) in vivo we isolated, a tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) XET cDNA (GenBank AA824986) from the homologous tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) clone named NtXET-1 (Accession no. D86730). The expression pattern revealed highest levels of NtXET-1 mRNA in organs highly enriched in vascular tissue. The levels of NtXET-1 mRNA decreased in midribs with increasing age of leaves. Increasing leaf age was correlated with an increase in the average molecular weight (MW) of xyloglucan (XG) and a decrease in the relative growth rates of leaves. Transgenic tobacco plants with reduced levels of XET activity were created to further study the biochemical consequences of reduced levels of NtXET-1 expression. In two independent lines, total XET activity could be reduced by 56% and 37%, respectively, in midribs of tobacco plants transformed with an antisense construct. The decreased activity led to an increase in the average MW of XG by at least 20%. These two lines of evidence argue for NtXET-1 being involved in the incorporation of small XG molecules into the cell wall by transglycosylation. Reducing the incorporation of small XG molecules will result in a shift towards a higher average MW. The observed reduction in NtXET-1 expression and increase in the MW of XG in older leaves might be associated with strengthening of cell walls by reduced turnover and hydrolysis of XG. Received: 24 January 2000 / Accepted: 21 July 2000  相似文献   

11.
By disintegration of the cell wall of staphylococci a definite interlayer located between the cytoplasmic membrane and the cell wall proper could be demonstrated for the first time (=MW-interlayer). This MW-interlayer contains a sort of cloddy material in which clusters of embedded ring-like disks are hexagonally arranged in a crystal-like manner. The ring-like disks, approximately 40 Å in diameter and with center-to-center spacings of approximately 75 Å, lie in direct contact either with a rhombically arranged fibrillar network of the outer parts of the cytoplasmic membrane or they themselves are part of (or interconnected by) such an apparently rhombical network. The crystal-like arranged ring-like disks of the interlayer between the cytoplasmic membrane and the cell wall shall be called MW-particles in order to differentiate them from intramembrane particles and particles on the outer surface of the cell wall. At present, nothing more than speculation on the function of the MW-particles located within the space where final processes of the cell wall polymerization are taking place is possible.Abbreviations MW membrane-wall - EF external face - PF protoplasmic face - PS protoplasmic surface - IM intramembrane  相似文献   

12.
Purified zymolyase containing β-glucanase activity preferentially released a 29 kDa mannoprotein from isolated yeast cell walls and a high-molecular-mass (greater than 120 kDa) material. Endo-β-N-acetylglucosaminidase H digestion indicated that the 29 kDa mannoprotein contains a unique core coligosaccharide N-glycosidically linked to a 26 kDa peptide moiety. Cells grown in the presence of tunicamycin incorporated the nonglycosylated 26 kDa peptide into the wall, but not the large mannoprotein molecules. Treatment of isolated walls with SDS solubilized more than 30 different mannoproteins, one of tehm being the 29 kDa species, but the large-size molecules were not affected. Regenerating protoplasts incorporated into the forming walls most of the SDS-solubilizable species seen in mature cell walls, but the zymolyase-solubilizable mannoproteins were absent. Wall mannoproteins have also been compared with those of the periplasmic space, most of the species being commonly present at both compartments. Turnover of individual species has been studied by pulse and chase experiments. While mannoproteins from the walls remain stable for long periods, periplasmic molecules exhibit a rapid turnover rate.  相似文献   

13.

Background and Aims

The pattern of callose deposition was followed in developing stomata of the fern Asplenium nidus to investigate the role of this polysaccharide in guard cell (GC) wall differentiation and stomatal pore formation.

Methods

Callose was localized by aniline blue staining and immunolabelling using an antibody against (1 → 3)-β-d-glucan. The study was carried out in stomata of untreated material as well as of material treated with: (1) 2-deoxy-d-glucose (2-DDG) or tunicamycin, which inhibit callose synthesis; (2) coumarin or 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile (dichlobenil), which block cellulose synthesis; (3) cyclopiazonic acid (CPA), which disturbs cytoplasmic Ca2+ homeostasis; and (d) cytochalasin B or oryzalin, which disintegrate actin filaments and microtubules, respectively.

Results

In post-cytokinetic stomata significant amounts of callose persisted in the nascent ventral wall. Callose then began degrading from the mid-region of the ventral wall towards its periphery, a process which kept pace with the formation of an ‘internal stomatal pore’ by local separation of the partner plasmalemmata. In differentiating GCs, callose was consistently localized in the developing cell-wall thickenings. In 2-DDG-, tunicamycin- and CPA-affected stomata, callose deposition and internal stomatal pore formation were inhibited. The affected ventral walls and GC wall thickenings contained membranous elements. Stomata recovering from the above treatments formed a stomatal pore by a mechanism different from that in untreated stomata. After coumarin or dichlobenil treatment, callose was retained in the nascent ventral wall for longer than in control stomata, while internal stomatal pore formation was blocked. Actin filament disintegration inhibited internal stomatal pore formation, without any effect on callose deposition.

Conclusions

In A. nidus stomata the time and pattern of callose deposition and degradation play an essential role in internal stomatal pore formation, and callose participates in deposition of the local GC wall thickenings.  相似文献   

14.
Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum cv. MD51) fiber cell walls were analyzed with an atomic force microscope to determine the effect of chemical treatments on cell wall organization and topography. Analysis of fibers in either air or water and without any staining or coating produced high-resolution images of cell wall microstructure which could be used for detailed quantitative analysis. Treatment of fibers with 1% H2O2 had little effect on surface morphology. Alkali removed much of the cuticle, some primary wall components, and revealed mostly thin-diameter microfibrils. Acidic Updegraff reagent fragmented the fibers, removed much of the cuticle, and revealed mostly thick microfibrils. The surface roughness of fibers treated sequentially with alkali and acid was quantitatively distinguishable from all other fiber types based on the standard deviation of the height data, amplification of surface area, and integration of the scan line data. Analysis of the fractal dimension enabled untreated and peroxide-treated fibers to be clearly distinguished from the other fiber types. Segmentation of the fractal data revealed specific portions of the fractal dimension which were especially useful for defining the size of structures that differentiated fiber types. Areas containing microfibrils could be quantitatively differentiated from non-microfibrillar areas. In water, some alkali-treated fibers had microfibrils that were relatively small in diameter while others appeared to consist of crystalline arrays of smaller fibrils. Received: 10 December 1996 / Accepted: 29 January 1997  相似文献   

15.
Summary Cultivation ofFunaria protonemata under plasmolytic or slightly subplasmolytic conditions initially causes a cessation of growth which is accompanied by a transient disappearance (or strong reduction in frequency, respectively) of putative cellulose synthesizing particle rosettes in the plasma membrane. Simultaneously, the formation and exocytosis of cell wall materialsecreting Golgi vesicles is slowed down. The latter process does not become apparent for several hours, though the reduction in activity can be proved indirectly. As a consequence of the imbalance between exocytosis, cell wall material accumulates in the plasmolytic space, generally at the cell tip. This indicates that the pattern of local, polar deposition of cell wall formation and cell elongation, membrane debris as well as wall material is maintained for some time. Later, however, the whole protoplast may become covered by new wall layers. Potentially growing filament tips and the distal region of nontip cells increase in diameter after longer cultivation in subplasmolytic conditions. It is suggested that normal wall growth results from a softening of the existing wall, its stretching and simultaneous stabilization by the apposition of new wall layers. We believe that the swelling is caused by a change in the equilibrium between the obviously less affected softening process and the imperfect stabilization by new wall layers because the wall layers which are formed at reduced turgor pressure are looser than normal and may have a changed composition.Kinetin-induced buds do not develop under plasmolytic conditions. Instead, spiral filaments are formed which readily give rise to buds when the osmotic value of the (kinetin-containing) medium is normalized. The results show that plasmolysis affects the expression of the developmental program rather than its initiation or maintenance.  相似文献   

16.
Summary. Plant cell walls are essential for proper growth, development, and interaction with the environment. It is generally accepted that land plants arose from aquatic ancestors which are sister groups to the charophycean algae (i.e., Streptophyta), and study of wall evolution during this transition promises insight into structure–function relationships of wall components. In this paper, we explore wall evolutionary history by studying the incorporation of pectin polymers into cell walls of the model organism Penium margaritaceum, a simple single-cell desmid. This organism produces only a primary wall consisting of three fibrillar or fibrous layers, with the outermost stratum terminating in distinct, calcified projections. Extraction of isolated cell walls with trans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid yielded a homogalacturonan (HGA) that was partially methyl esterified and equivalent to that found in land plants. Other pectins common to land plants were not detected, although selected components of some of these polymers were present. Labeling with specific monoclonal antibodies raised against higher-plant HGA epitopes (e.g., JIM5, JIM7, LM7, 2F4, and PAM1) demonstrated that the wall complex and outer layer projections were composed of the HGA which was significantly calcium complexed. JIM5 and JIM7 labeling suggested that highly methyl esterified HGA was secreted into the isthmus zone of dividing cells, the site of active wall secretion. As the HGA was displaced to more polar regions, de-esterification in a non-blockwise fashion occurred. This, in turn, allowed for calcium binding and the formation of the rigid outer wall layer. The patterning of HGA deposition provides interesting insights into the complex process of pectin involvement in the development of the plant cell wall. Correspondence and reprints: Department of Biology, Skidmore College, 815 North Broadway, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866, U.S.A.  相似文献   

17.
The architectural, compositional and functional characteristics of the cell walls of the leaves of the moss Rhacocarpus purpurascens (Brid.) Par. have been analysed by scanning and transmission electron microscopy, wall-extraction methods, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and water-retention experiments. Four-layered cell walls with a peculiar architecture which, so far, appears to be unique among plants were apparent. The architecture of the walls was not affected by sequential wall-extraction procedures. Subsequent analysis of the residual pre-extracted walls by classical spectro-photometrical methods revealed that the walls are composed of mainly lignin, hemicellulose and cellulose in a ratio of about 9:8:5, determining their integrity. This was supported by NMR spectroscopy. The resonance spectrum showed various characteristics typical of lignin; however, some specific peaks associated with lignin were missing. The walls exhibited no particular properties for external water conduction but seem to be adapted to rapid absorption of fog, dew, or rain. Received: 3 June 1997 / Accepted: 25 February 1998  相似文献   

18.
An approach commonly employed to assess the potential role of the enzyme polygalacturonase (PG, EC 3.2.1.15) in tomato fruit cell-wall pectin metabolism includes correlating levels of extractable PG with changes in specific characteristics of cell wall pectins, most notably solubility and molecular weight. Since information on these features of pectins is generally derived from analyses of subfractions of isolated cell wall, assurance of inactivation of the various isoforms of wall-associated PG is imperative. In the present study, cell wall prepared from ripe tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. Rutgers) fruit was examined for the presence of active PG and for the ability of phenolic solvents to inactivate the enzyme. Using pectin solubility and Mr (relative molecular mass) changes as criteria for the presence of wall-associated PG activity, pectins from phenol-treated and nonphenol-treated (enzymically active) cell wall from ripe fruit incubated in 50 mM Na-acetate, 50 mM cyclohexanetrans-1,2-diamine tetraacetic acid (CDTA), pH 6.5 (outside the catalytic range of PG), were of similar Mr and exhibited no change in size with incubation time. Wall prepared without exposure to the phenolic protein-denaturants exhibited extensive pectin solubilization and depolymerization when incubated in 50 mM Na-acetate, 50 mM CDTA at pH 4.5, indicating the presence of active PG. Based on the changes in the Mr of pectins solubilized in 50 mM Na-acetate, 50 mM CDTA, pH 4.5, active PG was also detected in wall exposed during isolation to phenolacetic acid-water (PAW, 2:1:1, w/v/v), a solvent commonly employed as an enzyme denaturant. Although the depolymerization of pectins in PAW-treated wall was extensive, oligouronides constituted minor reaction products. Interestingly, PAW-treated wall did not exhibit PG-mediated pectin release when incubated under conditions (30 mM Na-acetate, 150 mM NaCl, pH 4.5) in which nonphenol-treated cell wall exhibited high autolytic activity. In an alternative protocol designed to inactivate PG, cell wall was exposed to Tris-buffered phenol (BP). In contrast to pectins released from PAW-treated wall, pectins solubilized from BP-treated wall at pH 4.5 were indistinguishable in Mr from those recovered from BP-treated wall at pH 6.5 Even when incubated at pH 4.5 at 34°C, conditions under which pectins from PAW-treated wall underwent more rapid and extensive depolymerization, pectins from BP-treated wall exhibited no change in Mr, providing evidence that active PG was not present in these wall preparations. The implications of this study in interpreting the solubility and Mr of pectin in cell wall from ripening fruit are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: This study on reproductive biology examines the stigmatic morphology of 12 Brazilian Malpighiaceae species with regard to their pollination and breeding system. METHODS: The species were studied in natural populations of a semi-deciduous forest fragment. Style tips were processed for observation by SEM and pollen-tube growth was analyzed under fluorescence microscopy. The breeding system was investigated by isolating flowers within waterproof bags. Floral visitors were recorded through notes and photographs. KEY RESULTS: Flowers are yellow, pink or white, protogynous, herkogamous and sometimes lack oil glands. While Banisteriopsis pubipetala has functional female flowers (with indehiscent anthers), 11 species present hermaphrodite flowers. Stigmas of these species may be terminal, with a slightly concave surface, or internal, consisting of a circular cavity with a large orifice, and are covered with a thin, impermeable cuticle that prevents pollen from adhering, hydrating, or germinating. Malpighiaceae have a special type of 'wet' stigma, where a secretion accumulates under the cuticle and is released by mechanical means-mainly rupture by pollinators. Even though six species show a certain degree of self-compatibility, four of them present a form of late-acting self-incompatibility, and the individual of B. pubipetala is agamospermous. Species of Centris, Epicharis and Monoeca bees pollinate these flowers, mainly collecting oil. Some Epicharis and Monoeca species collected pollen by vibration. Paratetrapedia and Tetrapedia bees are pollen and oil thieves. CONCLUSIONS: The Malpiguiaceae species studied are pollinator-dependent, as spontaneous self-pollination is limited by herkogamy, protogyny and the stigmatic cuticle. Both the oil- and pollen-collecting behaviours of the pollinators favour the rupture of the stigmatic cuticle and the deposition of pollen on or inside the stigmas. As fruit-set rates in natural conditions are low, population fragmentation may have limited the sexual reproduction of these species.  相似文献   

20.
Main fractions from multi-component polysaccharidase preparations (Driselase, Gamanase and an experimental preparation of fungal origin), previously used for the enzymic treatment of cell wall materials from sunflower and palm-kernel meals, were sub-fractionated by different chromatographic techniques to evaluate the contribution of each of their constituent activities in cell wall degradation. Based on activity measurements, 5- to 10-fold purification was achieved for the major enzymes but residual side-activities were still detectable in most sub-fractions. Solubilization of non-starch polysaccharides from the cell wall materials by the resulting pectolytic, xylanolytic, cellulolytic and mannanolytic sub-fractions and by highly purified glucanases, arabinanases and xylanases was, when acting individually, very low (1% to 5%). With few exceptions, the solubilizing effect of the main fractions could only be slightly enhanced by supplementation with pectolytic, cellulolytic or mannanolytic sub-fractions or by highly purified enzymes. The extent of solubilization remained mostly lower than the sum of both individually obtained values. In the degradation of palm-kernel cell wall material, however, synergistic action of mannanases and glucanases was observed. The hydrolysis of pectic compounds in sunflower cell wall material was most effective when polygalacturonases, arabinanases and rhamnogalacturonan-degrading activities were applied together. The resistance of 4-O-methyl-glucuronoxylan, the major hemicellulosic polymer in the cell wall material from sunflower meal, to enzymic hydrolysis was not only caused by its location in the cell wall or interlinkage to other polymers but also by its primary structure. Neither purified endo-xylanase nor the crude parent preparation were able to achieve complete hydrolysis of this polysaccharide after extraction.  相似文献   

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