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 31 毫秒
1.
A borate-containing pectin was solubilized from sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L. ) cell walls by treatment with 0.5 M imidazole, pH 7. The molecular weight of the pectin was reduced when the borate ester was hydrolyzed by treatment with 1 N HCl. Treatment of the acid-treated pectin with boric acid in the presence of Pb(2+) gave a product whose molecular weight distribution was similar to the imidazole-soluble pectin. The imidazole-soluble pectin was saponified and then digested with endo- and exo-polygalacturonases. These treatments shifted the boron peak at the high molecular weight region to the low molecular weight (10 kDa), which corresponds to rhamnogalacturonan II-borate ester cross-linked dimer (dRG-II-B). The treatment also generated rhamnogalacturonan I (RG-I), dRG-II-B, monomeric rhamnogalacturonan II and galacturonic acid. These results show that imidazole solubilizes a high molecular weight borate-containing pectic complex composed of homogalacturonan-rhamnogalacturonan II and RG-I. Our data suggest that borate esters formed between rhamnogalacturonan II molecules cross-link the macromolecular pectin.  相似文献   

2.
A boron-polysaccharide complex was purified from a Driselasedigest of cell walls of radish roots. The complex had a molecularweight of 7.5 KDa and contained boron (0.232%, w/w), uronicacid (52.3%, w/w) and neutral sugars (32.4%). 11B-NMR spectroscopicanalysis suggested that the boron was present as a tetravalent1 : 2 borate-diol complex. 1This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid (no. 04660069) fromthe Ministry of Education, Science and Culture. 4Present address: Kasai Experimental Farm, Sumitomo ChemicalCo., Ltd. Kasai, Hyogo, 675-23 Japan.  相似文献   

3.
Rhamnogalacturonan II (RG-II) is a region of pectin macromolecules that is present in plant primary cell walls. RG-II can be solubilized from cell walls as a borate-RG-II complex (B-RG-II), where two RG-II fragments are cross-linked via a borate diester linkage. Here, a rabbit monoclonal antibody against B-RG-II was prepared, which recognized both B-RG-II and RG-II monomers without borate ester-crosslinking. A pectic fragment with unknown structure was also recognized by the antibody, but neither homogalacturonan nor rhamnogalacturonan I was recognized. Immunoelectron microscopic analyses of Arabidopsis root tip cells were performed using this antibody. The signal was detected in developing cell plates and cell walls, which were denser in longitudinal walls than in transverse walls. These results coincide with our previous results obtained in suspension cultured tobacco cells, confirming that RG-II is present in cell plates at an early stage of their assembly.

Abbreviations: B: boron; B-RG-II: borate-RG-II complex; ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; IgG: immunoglobulin G; mBSA: methylated bovine serum albumin; PGA: polygalacturonic acid; PLL: poly-l-lysine; RG-I: rhamnogalacturonan I; RG-II: rhamnogalacturonan II  相似文献   


4.
In plant cells, boron (B) occurs predominantly as a borate ester associated with rhamnogalacturonan II (RG-II), but the function of this B-RG-II complex has yet to be investigated. 3-Deoxy-D-manno-2-octulosonic acid (KDO) is a specific component monosaccharide of RG-II. Mutant plants defective in KDO biosynthesis are expected to have altered RG-II structure, and would be useful for studying the physiological function of the B-RG-II complex. Here, we characterized Arabidopsis CTP:KDO cytidylyltransferase (CMP-KDO synthetase; CKS), the enzyme activating KDO as a nucleotide sugar prior to its incorporation into RG-II. Our analyses localized the Arabidopsis CKS protein to mitochondria. The Arabidopsis CKS gene occurs as a single-copy gene in the genome, and we could not obtain cks null mutants from T-DNA insertion lines. Analysis using +/cks heterozygotes in the quartet1 background demonstrated that the cks mutation rendered pollen infertile through the inhibition of pollen tube elongation. These results suggest that KDO is an indispensable component of RG-II, and that the complete B-RG-II complex is essential for the cell wall integrity of rapidly growing tissues.  相似文献   

5.
This paper describes the isolation and characterization of rhamnogalacturonan II, a hitherto unobserved component of the primary cell walls of dicotyledonous plants. Rhamnogalacturonan II constitutes 3 to 4% of the primary cell walls of suspension-cultured sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus) cells. Rhamnogalacturonan II is a very complex polysaccharide yielding, upon hydrolysis, 10 different monosaccharides including the rarely observed sugars apiose, 2-O-methylxylose, and 2-O-methylfucose. In addition, rhamnogalacturonan II is characterized by the rarely observed glycosyl interconnections of 2-linked glucuronosyl, 3,4-linked fucosyl, and 3-linked rhamnosyl residues. These glycosyl linkages have never previously been detected in primary sycamore cell walls. Evidence is presented which suggests that polysaccharides similar to rhamnogalacturonan II are present in the primary cell walls of the three other dicotyledonous plants examined.  相似文献   

6.
By using immunofluorescence microscopy, we observed rapidly altered distribution patterns of cell wall pectins in meristematic cells of maize (Zea mays) and wheat (Triticum aestivum) root apices. This response was shown for homogalacturonan pectins characterized by a low level (up to 40%) of methylesterification and for rhamnogalacturonan II pectins cross-linked by a borate diol diester. Under boron deprivation, abundance of these pectins rapidly increased in cell walls, whereas their internalization was inhibited, as evidenced by a reduced and even blocked accumulation of these cell wall pectins within brefeldin A-induced compartments. In contrast, root cells of species sensitive to the boron deprivation, like zucchini (Cucurbita pepo) and alfalfa (Medicago sativa), do not internalize cell wall pectins into brefeldin A compartments and do not show accumulation of pectins in their cell walls under boron deprivation. For maize and wheat root apices, we favor an apoplastic target for the primary action of boron deprivation, which signals deeper into the cell via endocytosis-mediated pectin signaling along putative cell wall-plasma membrane-cytoskeleton continuum.  相似文献   

7.
Pectins are a highly complex family of cell wall polysaccharides comprised of homogalacturonan (HGA), rhamnogalacturonan I and rhamnogalacturonan II. We have specifically modified HGA in both tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) and Arabidopsis by expressing the endopolygalacturonase II of Aspergillus niger (AnPGII). Cell walls of transgenic tobacco plants showed a 25% reduction in GalUA content as compared with the wild type and a reduced content of deesterified HGA as detected by antibody labeling. Neutral sugars remained unchanged apart from a slight increase of Rha, Ara, and Gal. Both transgenic tobacco and Arabidopsis were dwarfed, indicating that unesterified HGA is a critical factor for plant cell growth. The dwarf phenotypes were associated with AnPGII activity as demonstrated by the observation that the mutant phenotype of tobacco was completely reverted by crossing the dwarfed plants with plants expressing PGIP2, a strong inhibitor of AnPGII. The mutant phenotype in Arabidopsis did not appear when transformation was performed with a gene encoding AnPGII inactivated by site directed mutagenesis.  相似文献   

8.
The cell‐wall pectic domain rhamnogalacturonan‐II (RG‐II) is cross‐linked via borate diester bridges, which influence the expansion, thickness and porosity of the wall. Previously, little was known about the mechanism or subcellular site of this cross‐linking. Using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) to separate monomeric from dimeric (boron‐bridged) RG‐II, we confirmed that Pb2+ promotes H3BO3‐dependent dimerisation in vitro. H3BO3 concentrations as high as 50 mm did not prevent cross‐linking. For in‐vivo experiments, we successfully cultured ‘Paul's Scarlet’ rose (Rosa sp.) cells in boron‐free medium: their wall‐bound pectin contained monomeric RG‐II domains but no detectable dimers. Thus pectins containing RG‐II domains can be held in the wall other than via boron bridges. Re‐addition of H3BO3 to 3.3 μm triggered a gradual appearance of RG‐II dimer over 24 h but without detectable loss of existing monomers, suggesting that only newly synthesised RG‐II was amenable to boron bridging. In agreement with this, Rosa cultures whose polysaccharide biosynthetic machinery had been compromised (by carbon starvation, respiratory inhibitors, anaerobiosis, freezing or boiling) lost the ability to generate RG‐II dimers. We conclude that RG‐II normally becomes boron‐bridged during synthesis or secretion but not post‐secretion. Supporting this conclusion, exogenous [3H]RG‐II was neither dimerised in the medium nor cross‐linked to existing wall‐associated RG‐II domains when added to Rosa cultures. In conclusion, in cultured Rosa cells RG‐II domains have a brief window of opportunity for boron‐bridging intraprotoplasmically or during secretion, but secretion into the apoplast is a point of no return beyond which additional boron‐bridging does not readily occur.  相似文献   

9.
Egelund J  Damager I  Faber K  Olsen CE  Ulvskov P  Petersen BL 《FEBS letters》2008,582(21-22):3217-3222
An Arabidopsis thaliana gene, At1g56550, was expressed in Pichia pastoris and the recombinant protein was shown to catalyse transfer of d-xylose from UDP-alpha-d-xylose onto methyl alpha-l-fucoside. The product formed was shown by 1D and 2D (1)H NMR spectroscopy to be Me alpha-d-Xyl-(1,3)-alpha-l-Fuc, which is identical to the proposed target structure in the A-chain of rhamnogalacturonan II. Chemically synthesized methyl l-fucosides derivatized by methyl groups on either the 2-, 3- or 4 position were tested as acceptor substrates but only methyl 4-O-methyl-alpha-l-fucopyranoside acted as an acceptor, although to a lesser extent than methyl alpha-l-fucoside. At1g56550 is suggested to encode a rhamnogalacturonan II specific xylosyltransferase.  相似文献   

10.
In cultured tobacco BY-2 cells, more than 90% of the cellularboron (B) occurs in the cell wall and a negligible amount ofB is detected in the membrane fraction. Nearly 80% of the cellwall B binds to rhamnogalacturonan II (RG-II) to form a borate-dimericRG-II complex. Mono-meric RG-II is not detected in the cellwall, but it is detected in the extracellular polysaccharides.The complex is reconstituted spontaneously in vitro simply bymixing mon-omeric RG-II and boric acid at pH 4. Germanic acid,which partially substitutes for B in the growth of the B-deprivedplants, also induces dimerization of RG-II. These results suggeststhat B may fulfill its essential function as forming the B-RG-IIcomplex in cell walls. 1 Present address: Kasai Experimental Farm, Sumitomo ChemicalCo., Ltd., Kasai, Hyogo, 675%ndash;23 Japan  相似文献   

11.
Monoclonal antibodies were raised against rhamnogalacturonan I backbone, a pectin domain, using Arabidopsis thaliana seed mucilage-derived rhamnogalacturonan I oligosaccharides—BSA conjugates. Two monoclonal antibodies, designated INRA-RU1 and INRA-RU2, selected for further characterization, were specific for the backbone of rhamnogalacturonan I, displaying no binding activity against the other pectin domains i.e. homogalacturonans, galactans or arabinans. A range of oligosaccharides was prepared by enzymatic digestion of rhamnogalacturonan I isolated from Arabidopsis thaliana seed mucilage and from sugar beet pectin, purified by low-pressure chromatography and characterized by high-performance anion-exchange chromatography and mass spectrometry. These rhamnogalacturonan I oligomers were used to characterize the binding site of the two monoclonal antibodies by competitive inhibition. Both INRA-RU1 and INRA-RU2 showed maximal binding to the [→2)-α-l-rhamnosep-(1→4)-α-d-galacturonic acid p-(1→]7 structural motif but differed in their minimum binding requirement. INRA-RU2 required at least two disaccharide (rhamnose–galacturonic acid) repeats for the antibody to bind, while INRA-RU1 required a minimum of six disaccharide repeats. Furthermore, the binding capacity of INRA-RU1 decreased steeply as the number of disaccharide repeats go beyond seven. Each of these antibodies reacted with hairy regions isolated from sugar beet pectin. Immunofluorescence microscopy indicated that both antibodies can be readily used to detect rhamnogalacturonan I epitopes in various cell wall samples.  相似文献   

12.
The pectic polysaccharide rhamnogalacturonan II (RG-II), which accounts for ˜ 20% of the ethanol-precipitable polysaccharides in red wine, has been isolated from wine polysaccharides by anion-exchange chromatography. Four fractions enriched with RG-II were obtained and the RG-II then purified to homogeneity by Concanavalin A affinity and size-exclusion chromatographies. The glycosyl-residue compositions of the four RG-IIs are similar; all the RG-IIs contain the monosaccharides (apiose, , , Kdo, Dha, and aceric acid) that are diagnostic of RG-II. The glycosyl-linkages of the neutral and acidic sugars, including aceric acid, were determined simultaneously by GC-EIMS analysis of the methylated alditol acetates generated from per-O-methylated and carboxyl-reduced RG-II. Two of the RG-IIs contain boron, most likely as a borate di-ester that cross-links two molecules of RG-II together to form a dimer. The dimer contains 3′- and 2,3,3′-linked apiosyl residues whereas the monomer contains only 3′-linked apiosyl residues which suggests that the borate di-ester is located on at least one of the apiosyl residues of RG-II. Although the wine RG-IIs all have similar structures they are not identical since they differ in the length and degree of methyl-esterification of the RG-II backbone and in the presence or absence of borate di-esters. Nevertheless, these studies show that the major structural features of wine and primary cell wall RG-II are conserved.  相似文献   

13.
We have studied the structures of adducts formed between subtilisin BPN' and both benzeneboronic acid and 2-phenylethaneboronic acid by x-ray diffraction techniques. Electron density and difference maps at 2.5 A resolution were computed with phases calculated from a partially refined structure of the native enzyme (R = 0.23 at 2.0 A). Both adducts contain a covalent bond between Ogamma of the catalytic Ser-221 and the inhibitor boron atom. The boron atom is coordinated tetrahedrally, with one of the two additional boronic acid oxygen atoms lying in the "oxyanion hole" and the other at the leaving group site identified in previous studies (ROBERTUS, J.D., Kraut, J. ALDEN, R.A., and BIRKTOFT, J.J. (1972) Biochemistry 11, 4293-4303). Moreover, the previously postulated structure of the tetrahedral intermediate for substrate hydrolysis is isosteric with these boronic acid adducts, which can therefore be considered good models for the transition state complex (KOEHLER, K.K., and LIENHARD, G.E. (1972) Biochemistry 10, 2477-2483). These observations further support the suggestion that an important contribution to stabilization of this transition state complex, relative to both the Michaelis complex and the acyl intermediate, occurs as a consequence of hydrogen bond donation to the substrate carbonyl oxygen atom from the side chain amido group of Asn-155 and from the backbone amido group of Ser-221.  相似文献   

14.

Background and Aims

Pectin is a complex macromolecule, the fine structure of which is influenced by many factors. It is used as a gelling, thickening and emulsifying agent in a wide range of applications, from food to pharmaceutical products. Current industrial pectin extraction processes are based on fruit peel, a waste product from the juicing industry, in which thousands of tons of citrus are processed worldwide every year. This study examines how pectin components vary in relation to the plant source (orange, lemon, lime, grapefruit) and considers the influence of extraction conditions on the chemical and macromolecular characteristics of pectin samples.

Methods

Citrus peel (orange, lemon, lime and grapefruit) from a commercial supplier was used as raw material. Pectin samples were obtained on a bulk plant scale (kilograms; harsh nitric acid, mild nitric acid and harsh oxalic acid extraction) and on a laboratory scale (grams; mild oxalic acid extraction). Pectin composition (acidic and neutral sugars) and physicochemical properties (molar mass and intrinsic viscosity) were determined.

Key Results

Oxalic acid extraction allowed the recovery of pectin samples of high molecular weight. Mild oxalic acid-extracted pectins were rich in long homogalacturonan stretches and contained rhamnogalacturonan I stretches with conserved side chains. Nitric acid-extracted pectins exhibited lower molecular weights and contained rhamnogalacturonan I stretches encompassing few and/or short side chains. Grapefruit pectin was found to have short side chains compared with orange, lime and lemon. Orange and grapefruit pectin samples were both particularly rich in rhamnogalacturonan I backbones.

Conclusions

Structural, and hence macromolecular, variations within the different citrus pectin samples were mainly related to their rhamnogalacturonan I contents and integrity, and, to a lesser extent, to the length of their homogalacturonan domains.  相似文献   

15.
Screening of commercially available fluoro monosaccharides as putative growth inhibitors in Arabidopsis thaliana revealed that 2‐fluoro 2‐l ‐fucose (2F‐Fuc) reduces root growth at micromolar concentrations. The inability of 2F‐Fuc to affect an Atfkgp mutant that is defective in the fucose salvage pathway indicates that 2F‐Fuc must be converted to its cognate GDP nucleotide sugar in order to inhibit root growth. Chemical analysis of cell wall polysaccharides and glycoproteins demonstrated that fucosylation of xyloglucans and of N‐linked glycans is fully inhibited by 10 μm 2F‐Fuc in Arabidopsis seedling roots, but genetic evidence indicates that these alterations are not responsible for the inhibition of root development by 2F‐Fuc. Inhibition of fucosylation of cell wall polysaccharides also affected pectic rhamnogalacturonan‐II (RG‐II). At low concentrations, 2F‐Fuc induced a decrease in RG‐II dimerization. Both RG‐II dimerization and root growth were partially restored in 2F‐Fuc‐treated seedlings by addition of boric acid, suggesting that the growth phenotype caused by 2F‐Fuc was due to a deficiency of RG‐II dimerization. Closer investigation of the 2F‐Fuc‐induced growth phenotype demonstrated that cell division is not affected by 2F‐Fuc treatments. In contrast, the inhibitor suppressed elongation of root cells and promoted the emergence of adventitious roots. This study further emphasizes the importance of RG‐II in cell elongation and the utility of glycosyltransferase inhibitors as new tools for studying the functions of cell wall polysaccharides in plant development. Moreover, supplementation experiments with borate suggest that the function of boron in plants might not be restricted to RG‐II cross‐linking, but that it might also be a signal molecule in the cell wall integrity‐sensing mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
《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   

17.
Polysaccharide fractions SAcI and SAcII were isolated from callus tissues of rowan tree stems. The SAcI fraction was shown to contain compounds belonging to the arabinogalactan II group. The SAcII fraction, called sorban, comprised pectic polysaccharides composing the protopectin complex of the cell wall callus. The SAcII fraction was found to contain a large amount of galacturonic acid residues and a set of neutral sugars characteristic of rhamnogalacturonan I. The composition and properties allowed a suggestion that the sorban backbone is mainly formed by 1,4-α-D-galactopyranosyluronic acid residues, while the neutral sugars are represented by 1,4-linked glucopyranose and xylopyranose residues, 1,5-linked arabinofuranose, 1,6-linked galactopyranose and mannofuranose residues as well as terminal glucopyranose and xylopyranose residues. The callus growth was shown to be associated with nearly a constant content of galacturonic acid and neutral sugar residues in sorban (fraction SAcII).  相似文献   

18.
Aceric acid (3-C-carboxy-5-deoxy-alpha-l-xylofuranose) residues are present in pectic polysaccharide rhamnogalacturonan II (RG II) in the form of synthetically challenging 1,2-cis-glycofuranosides. To access synthetic fragments of RG II incorporating aceric acid, a four-step procedure based on C-2 epimerisation of initially prepared 1,2-trans-glycofuranoside was developed. Readily available derivatives of branched-chain l-lyxofuranose bearing a 3-C-vinyl group as a masked 3-C-carboxyl group were investigated as potential precursors of aceric acid units. In the first step of the procedure, installation of a participating group at C-2 of the furanose ring ensured stereocontrol of the O-glycosylation, which was carried out with the thioglycoside of 2-O-acetyl-3,5-di-O-benzyl-3-C-vinyl-L-lyxofuranose. After the glycosylation step, the 2-O-acetyl group was removed, the free 2-OH group was oxidised and the resulting ketone was finally reduced to form the C-3-vinyl-L-xylofuranoside. The use of L-Selectride in the key reduction reaction was essential to achieve the required stereoselectivity to generate 1,2-cis-furanoside.  相似文献   

19.
Considerable information has been obtained about the primary structures of suspension-cultured sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus) cell-wall pectic polysaccharides, i.e. rhamnogalacturonan I, rhamnogalacturonan II, and homogalacturonan. However, these polysaccharides, which are solubilized from the walls by endo-α-1,4-polygalacturonase, account for only about half of the pectic polysaccharides known to be present in sycamore cell walls. We now report that, after exhaustive treatment with endo-α-1,4-polygalacturonase, additional pectic polysaccharides were extracted from sycamore cell walls by treatment with Na2CO3 at 1 and 22°C. These previously uncharacterized polysaccharides accounted for ~4% of the cell wall. Based on the glycosyl and glycosyl-linkage compositions and the nature of the products obtained by treating the quantitatively predominant NaCO3-extracted polysaccharides with lithium metal dissolved in ethylenediamine, the polysaccharides were found to strongly resemble rhamnogalacturonan I. However, unlike rhamnogalacturonan I that characteristically had equal amounts of 2- and 2,4-linked rhamnosyl residues in its backbone, the polysaccharides extracted in Na2CO3 at 1°C had markedly disparate ratios of 2- to 2,4-linked rhamnosyl residues. We concluded that polysaccharides similar to rhamnogalacturonan I but with different degrees of branching are present in the walls of suspension-cultured sycamore cells.  相似文献   

20.
《BBA》1987,893(3):426-433
A highly active O2-evolving Photosystem II complex has been purified from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp., and this complex has been compared with the Photosystem II complex previously isolated from this cyanobacterium (Ohno, T., Satoh, K. and Katoh, S. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 852, 1–8). Further treatment of the O2-evolving complex with the detergent sodium taurodesoxycholate resulted in a complex which consisted mainly of the 47 and 40 kDa peptides and which had lost the O2-evolving activity, but which could still reduce 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol with 1,5-diphenylcarbazide. Previously, we have shown that a flavoprotein of 49 kDa which has an l-amino acid oxidase activity under certain conditions, is a component of highly active Photosystem II preparations from the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans (Pistorius, E.K. and Gau, A.E. (1986) FEBS Lett. 206, 243–248). Based on immunological studies with the antiserum raised against the l-amino acid oxidase protein from A. nidulans, we show that a protein which cross-reacts with this antiserum is present in the highly purified Photosystem II preparations from Synechococcus sp. Moreover, an l-amino acid oxidase activity could also be detected in Photosystem II preparations from Synechococcus sp. The enzyme preferentially oxidizes basic l-amino acids as l-arginine, l-ornithine, 2,3-diamino propionic acid and l-citrulline. In contrast to the enzyme from A. nidulansl-lysine is not oxidized. The here shown presence of an l-amino acid oxidase protein in Photosystem II preparations from Synechococcus sp. is an additional support of our hypothesis that a flavoprotein is a functional component of the water-oxidizing enzyme complex.  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