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1.
Lorences, E. P., Suárez, L. and Zarra, I. 1987. Hypocotyl growth of Pinus pinaster seedlings. Changes in the molecular weight distribution of hemicellulosic polysaccharides.
The changes in the molecular weight distribution of water-soluble hemicelluloses and xyloglucan during hypocotyl growth of intact seedlings of Pinus pinaster Aiton were investigated. The mass-average molecular weight of total polysaccharides of the hemicellulose fraction soluble in 4% KOH dramatically increased during hypocotyl growth while xyloglucan slightly decreased. These phenomena were due to an increase in the degree of polymerization of an arabinogalactan and a slight depolymer-ization in the xyloglucan present in this fraction. In the hemicellulose fraction soluble in 24% KOH, xyloglucan increased its degree of polymerization from day 7 to 10 after which it decreased slightly. The xyloglucan of the hemicellulose fraction soluble in 4% KOH may thus be involved in cell wall loosening which makes cell wall expansion possible during hypocotyl growth.  相似文献   

2.
The changes in the endogenous growth as well as in the cell wall composition were studied along the hypocotyl of Pinus pinaster Aiton. Cell elongation decreased as the distance from the cotyledonary node increased. Pectic polysaccharides underwent an important depolymerization accompanied by a decrease in their uronic acid content from the apical to basal region of the hypocotyl. Additionally, the molecular mass of pectic polysaccharides strongly decreased from the apical to the basal regions. Watersoluble hemicellulosic polysaccharides extracted with 4% KOH decreased notably from the cotyledonary node towards the base, while water-soluble polysaccharides extracted with 24% KOH showed few differences along the hypocotyl. The molecular mass of xyloglucan present in both hemicellulosic fractions was lower in the upper hypocotyl region as compared with the basal region. These findings are in agreement with an active xyloglucan depolymerization in the upper region as would be expected in a region exhibiting very active growth.  相似文献   

3.
The correlation between hypocotyl elongation, cell wall loosening and changes in cell wall polysaccharides was studied using intact lettuce seedlings grown in the dark or in light together with gibberellic acid (GA) and/or 5-fluorodeoxyuridine (FUDR). The following results were obtained:
1) The production of pectic, hemicellulosic and cellulosic polysaccharides look place in parallel with hypocotyl elongation, which was substantially affected by different growth conditions.
2) The mole percentage sugar composition of pectic and hemicellulosic polysaccharides changed in response to dark, light, GA, or FUDR treatments.
3) The amounts of xylose and glucose in hemicellulosic polysaccharides and those of galactosc, rhumnose and uronic acid in pectic polysaccharides increased in parallel with hypocotyl elongation.
4) Statistical analysis of the quantitative relationship between sugars composing polysaccharides revealed that the uronic acid content changed in parallel with those of rhamnose and galactose in pectic polysaccharides, and the content of xylose varied in parallel with those of fucose and glucose.
5) The content of hemicellulosic polysaccharides was correlated with cell wall loosening represented by a decrease in the minimum stress-relaxation time. Changes in the stress-relaxation time value were correlated with those in the content of araltinose and galactose in hemicellulosic polysaccharides.
Based on these results, the relationship between hypocotyl elongation, changes in cell wall polysaccharides, and cell wall loosening is discussed with respect to the effect of GA and FUDR on hypocotyl elongation.  相似文献   

4.
Softening of grape berries ( Vitis vinifera L. × V. labruscana cv. Kyoho) was evaluated by studying changes in composition and degradation of cell-wall polysaccharides. The grape berry softens at the beginning of the second growth cycle many weeks before harvest. The softening stage is called 'veraison' by viticulturists. On day 50 after full bloom, green hard berries (before veraison [BV]), softening berries (veraison [V]) and partly peel colored berries (C) were selected from the same clusters. In addition, mature berries (M) were collected on day 78 after full bloom. Mesocarp tissues at each stage were fractionated into hot water-soluble (WS), hot EDTA-soluble (pectin), alkali-soluble (hemicellulose) and residual (cellulose) fractions. Neutral and acidic sugar contents of WS and pectin fractions decreased only after the V stage, while the neutral sugar content of the hemicellulose fraction decreased from the BV to V stages. Cellulose content constantly decreased as the berry ripened, but the large decrease was found from the BV to V stages. Molecular masses of pectic and hemicellulosic polysaccharides decreased from the BV to V stages. Hemicellulosic xyloglucan was markedly depolymerized from the BV to V stages. The neutral and acidic sugar composition of each fraction changed little during the berry ripening. These data indicated that softening of berry during veraison involved the depolymerization of pectin and xyloglucan molecules and decrease in the amounts of hemicellulose and cellulose.  相似文献   

5.
The changes in osmotic potential and cell wall composition of hypocotyl cell walls from different hypocotyl regions were investigated during growth of etiolated seedlings of Pinus pinaster Aiton. The osmotic potential in the subapical 5 mm part was minimum when hypocotyl growth rate was low, and increased when the fast growth phase began. The main non-cellulosic sugars of the cell wall from pine hypocotyl were arabinose, galactose, xylose, glucose and uronic acids, although their relative proportions were different from those found for angiosperm cell walls. Non-cellulosic glucose was the sugar showing the most important changes during hypocotyl growth as well as along the hypocotyl, suggesting that a glucose-rich polysaccharide is involved in a very active turnover during growth. A partial degradation of a xyloglucan during growth is suggested.  相似文献   

6.
The changes in pectic and hemicellulosic polysaccharides, and-cellulose during the expansion growth of the primary leavesof Phaseolus vulgaris L. var. Pinta have been studied. -Celluloseincreased continuously with age, while pectic and water-solublehemicellulose extracted with 4% KOH fractions slightly decreased.The water-soluble hemicelluloses extracted with 24% KOH showedthe most conspicuous changes, increasing until the 8th day,when the absolute growth rate was maximal, and thereafter decreasing.Furthermore, the study of the molecular mass distribution ofpectin, and water-soluble polysaccharides extracted with 4%and 24% KOH, showed an increase in the degree of polymerizationof polyuronic acid and xylan, and an important depolymerizationof galactan and xyloglucan. Accordingly, the mechanism of cellwall loosening in the leaf cell walls is similar to that describedfor plant axes. Key words: Cell wall, growth, leaf  相似文献   

7.
Changes in the composition of cell walls and extracellular polysaccharides (ECP) were studied during the growth of suspension-cultured Populus alba cells. Three growth phases, namely the cell division phase, cell elongation phase and stationary phase, were distinguished. The active deposition of polysaccharides in cell wall fractions (50 m M Na2CO3-, 1 M KOH-, 4 M KOH-soluble and 4 M KOH-insoluble) was observed during the elongation phase. A 50 m M Na2CO3-soluble pectic fraction mainly composed of 1,4-linked galactan and arabinan except acidic sugars. The 1,4-linked galactan decreased markedly during elongation. In 1 and 4 M KOH-soluble hemicellulosic fractions, non-cellulosic 1,4-glucan and xyloglucan were observed as major components, respectively. These polysaccharides also decreased during elongation. A large amount of polysaccharides was secreted into the medium as ECP. Neutral sugars were detected predominantly by sugar composition analysis. Acidic sugars, such as galacturonic acid, were less than 12% of total. In this study, active metabolism of pectic polysaccharides in addition to hemicellulosic polysaccharides, especially neutral side chains of pectin, during cell growth, was clarified.  相似文献   

8.
Hypocotyl growth of dark-grown squash (Cucurbita maxima Duch.)seedlings was greatly reduced by the addition of polyethyleneglycol (60 mM) to the hydroponic solution through inhibitionof cell elongation. Measurement of the mechanical propertiesof the cell walls revealed that the cell wall of stressed hypocotylswas loosened as much as that of the unstressed hypocotyls, suggestingthat the stressed hypocotyl could not elongate even though thecell wall loosened. Galactose and arabinose in the pectic fraction,which are probably attached to high mol wt rhamnogalacturonans,increased under stressed as well as under unstressed condition.Other polysaccharides including pectic low mol wt galacturonans,hemicellulosic xyloglucans, galactoglucomannans, arabinans,and glucuronoarabinoxylans increased more under unstressed condition.The mol wt of xyloglucans in the hemicellulosic fraction increasedunder unstressed but not under stressed condition. These results suggest that changes in wall structure, such asincreases in high mol wt rhamnogaracturonans rich in arabinoseand galactose residues, and the suppression of polymerizationof xyloglucans are involved in the process of cell wall loosening. (Received December 15, 1986; Accepted June 8, 1987)  相似文献   

9.
Roberts RM  Loewus F 《Plant physiology》1966,41(9):1489-1498
Prolonged growth of cell cultures of sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus L.) on agar medium containing myo-inositol-2-(3)H resulted in incorporation of label predominately into uronosyl and pentosyl units of cell wall polysaccharides. Procedures normally used to distinguish between pectic substance and hemicellulose yielded carbohydrate-rich fractions with solubility characteristics ranging from pectic substance to hemicellulose yet the uronic acid and pentose composition of these fractions was decidedly pectic. Galacturonic acid was the only uronic acid present in each fraction. Subfractionation of alkali-soluble (hemicellulosic) polysaccharide by neutralization followed by ethanol precipitation gave 3 fractions, a water-insoluble, an ethanol-insoluble, and an ethanol-soluble fraction, each progressively poorer in galacturonic acid units and progressively richer in arabinose units; all relatively poor in xylose units.Apparently, processes involved in biosynthesis of primary cell wall continued to produce pectic substance during cell enlargement while processes leading to biosynthesis of typically secondary cell wall polysaccharide such as 4-0-methyl glucuronoxylan were not activated.  相似文献   

10.
To understand cell wall polysaccharide synthesis and the role of gall in interaction with aphids, the changes of sugar contents in the galls during their growth and development were determined from May 2 to June 8, 1996. The sugar content in the symplastic (MeOH and hot water) fractions decreased as the developmental stages progressed. In the cell wall fraction, the amount of pectic substances (2-3 mg per gram fresh weight) did not change. The hemicellulosic substance increased by 40% from May 14 to May 31. Among the neutral sugar components of hemicellulosic polysaccharides, xylose and arabinose contents increased during development of the gall, suggesting that xylans with arabinose residues were massively synthesized. On the other hand, glucose content decreased during development of the gall. The cellulose substance consistently increased 5 folds from May 2 to 31. The relationship between the aphid and the changes in sugar contents of cell walls during the development of aphid and the gall formation was discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Changes in cell wall polysaccharides in oat (Avena sativa L.) leaf segments during senescence promoted by methyl jasmonate (JA-Me) were studied. During the incubation with water at 25 °C in the dark, the loss of chlorophyll of the segments excised from the primary leaves of 8-day-old green seedlings was found dramatically just after leaf excision, and leaf color completely turned to yellow after the 3- to 4-day incubation in the dark. Application of 10 µM JA-Me substantially promoted the loss of chlorophyll corresponding with the chloroplast degradation. Cell wall polysaccharides in oat leaf segments mainly consisted of hemicellulosic and cellulosic ones. During the process of leaf senescence, the amount of hemicellulosic I and II, and cellulosic polysaccharides decreased, but little in pectic polysaccharides. JA-Me significantly enhanced the decrease in cellulosic polysaccharides, but little in hemicellulosic ones. Arabinose, xylose and glucose were identified as main constituents of neutral sugars of hemicellulosic polysaccharides. The neutral sugar compositions of hemicellulosic polysaccharides changed little during leaf senescence both in the presence or absence of JA-Me. These facts suggest that JA-Me affects sugar metabolism relating to cellulosic polysaccharides during leaf senescence.  相似文献   

12.
The apoplastic fluid of pine ( Pinus pinaster Aiton) hypocotyls contains ascorbic acid (AA) and dehydroascorbic acid (DHA). The amounts of ascorbic and dehydroascorbic acids were in the nmol (g fresh weight)−1 range and decreased with the hypocotyl age as well as along the hypocotyl axis. The ratio AA/(AA+DHA) also decreased with the hypocotyl age and along the hypocotyl. Both ascorbic oxidase and peroxidase activity against ascorbic acid showed very low activity not only in the apoplastic fluid but also in the fractions ionically and covalently bound to the cell walls. However, the peroxidase activity in the three abovementioned fractions was strongly increased in the presence of ferulic acid. That stimulation effect increased with the hypocotyl age and from the apical towards the basal region of the hypocotyls of 10-day-old seedlings. Furthermore, the oxidation of ferulic acid by apoplastic and ionically- and covalently-bound peroxidases was inhibited by ascorbic acid as long as ascorbate was available. A regulatory role of apoplastic ascorbic acid levels in the formation of dehydrodiferulic bridges between wall polysaccharides catalysed by cell wall peroxidases and thus in the cell wall stiffening during plant growth is proposed.  相似文献   

13.
Hypocotyl growth of dark-grown squash (Cucurbita maxima Duch.)seedlings was greatly reduced by the addition of 60 mM polyethyleneglycol (PEG) to hydroponic solution (water stress). When PEGwas removed after one day, growth promptly recovered. The contents of hemicelluloses and cellulose in the wall increasedunder unstressed condition as hypocotyls grew but these increaseswere substantially reduced by water stress. The increases inwall polysaccharide contents recovered when the water stresswas relieved. The amounts per hypocotyl of cellulose and thatof uronic acid in pectin changed in parallel with the growth(r=0.95 and 0.98, respectively). The amounts of most of thesugar components of hemicelluloses also changed in parallelwith hypocotyl growth. Pectic and hemicellulosic galactose contentof unstressed hypocotyls increased to day 2 when the hypocotylgrew at a maximum growth rate, then decreased. In contrast,galactose content of stressed hypocotyls progressively increasedto the end of the experiment. The results indicated that water stress substantially reducednet increases in most of the polysaccharides of the hypocotylcell walls when it reduced the growth, but it did not affectsyntheses of some galactosic polysaccharides in pectin and hemicelluloseB. We assume that the syntheses of non-galactosic wall polysaccharidesare associated with hypocotyl growth and the synthesis of galactose-containingpolysaccharides with preservation of the potential of the cellwall to be loosened, since hypocotyl growth promptly and completelyrecovers when water stress is relieved. (Received December 15, 1986; Accepted June 8, 1987)  相似文献   

14.
Bananas, Musa (AAA group, Cavendish subgroup) 'Giant Cavendish', were ripened in a biotron at 25°C with ethylene during 4 days. Changes in mechanical properties of pulp were detected by a stress-relaxation technique. The decrease in T0, the parameter for minimum stress-relaxation time, began between day 0.5 and 1, while the decrease in initial stress began between day 0 and 0.5, suggesting that the decrease in elasticity and viscosity of pulp is a crucial physical event of pulp softening. Cellulose and moisture contents were about 3 and 780 mg (g fresh weight)−1, respectively, which were unchanged during ripening. The decrease in starch content of cell materials and in uronic acid content of the pectic polysaccharides of the cell walls began between day 0.5 and 1. As regards the sugar composition of the hemicellulose fraction, decreases in arabinose, mannose and galactose contents began between day 0 and 0.5. The results show that the partial decrease in hemicelluloses preceded the breakdown of starch and suggest that the coordinated degradation of pectic and hemicellulosic polysaccharides and starch is the main cause for the pulp softening process.  相似文献   

15.
Changes in pectin, hemicelluloses and cellulose in the cell walls of outer pericarp tissues of kiwifruit (Actinidia deliciosa cv. Hayward) were determined during development. An extensive amylase digestion was employed to remove possible contaminating starch before and after fractionation of wall polysaccharides. An initial treatment of crude cell walls with alpha-amylase and iso-amylase or DMSO, was found to be insufficient removing the contaminating starch from wall polysaccharides. After EDTA and alkaline extraction, the pectic and hemicellulose fractions were again treated with the combination of alpha-amylase and iso-amylase. The amounts of predominant pectic sugars Gal, Rha and Ara, unaffected by the first and second amylase digestion, decreased markedly during the early fruit enlargement (8-12 weeks after anthesis, WAA), then increased during 16-20 WAA, and finally declined during fruit maturity (20-25 WAA). The molecular-mass of pectic polysaccharides decreased during fruit enlargement (8-16 WAA), and then changed little during fruit maturity. The higher molecular-mass components of hemicelluloses in HC-I and HC-II fractions detected at the early stage of fruit enlargement (8-12 WAA) were degraded at the late stage of fruit enlargement (16 WAA), but then remained stable at the much lower molecular-mass till fruit maturity. The amount of Xyl in the HC-II fraction decreased during the early fruit enlargement and fruit maturity, an observation that was consistent with xyloglucan (XG) content. The gel permeation profiles of XG showed a slight increase in higher molecular-mass components during 8-12 WAA, but thereafter there was no significant down-shift of molecular-mass until harvest time. The cellulose fraction increased steadily during fruit enlargement through maturity, but the XG contents in HC-I and HC-II fractions remained at a low level during these stages. Methylation analysis of HC-I and HC-II fractions confirmed the low level of XG in the hemicellulosic fractions. It was suggested that pectin in the outer pericarp of kiwifruit was degraded at the early stage of fruit enlargement, but XG remains constant during fruit enlargement and maturation.  相似文献   

16.
A protocol for extracting polysaccharides from cell walls has been modified and used to analyze histochemically two fruits with opposite characteristics. Grapes are nonclimacteric fruits and are harvested at full maturity. In contrast, kiwi fruits are climacteric and are harvested and consumed before they are physiologically mature. The two fruits were analyzed histochemically using two protocols. One method is defined as chemical, and is based on subsequential extractions of pectins by chemical agents. The other is defined as enzymatic because it removes pectins using pectinase followed by hot ammonium oxalate. In both protocols, two types of hemicellulosic polymers are removed by 1 M and 4 M/KOH leaving a cellulosic residue on the slide. Both protocols remove the same amount of pectins, thus confirming their precision. The sum of hemicellulose and the cellulosic insoluble residue are equivalent using the two methods, but the relative amounts of the cellulose and hemicellulosic polymers were dependent upon the method of extraction. When the enzyme was used to extract the pectins, there was less cellulose and more hemicellulose. The removal of polysaccharides by ammonium oxalate and by guanidinethio-cyanate in the enzymatic and the chemical protocols, respectively, yielded approximately the same amount of removed material.

Similar results were obtained from both fruits. Grape, being softer than kiwi fruit, was relatively richer in pectic substances and less rich in hemicellulose and cellulose polymers. No difference in cell wall material could be ascribed to the different ripening habits.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The inhibition of growth by polyethlene glycol (PEG)-induced osmotic stress led to modifications in the changes taking place in cell wall composition during normal growth of epicotyls of Cicer arietinum L. cv. Castellana. Epicotyls growing under normal conditions showed a decrease in the amount of pectic fractions and an increase in the hemicellulosic fractions and α-cellulose that led to an increase in the rigidity and a loss in growth capacity. Among the hemicellulosic fractions, the KI-2 fraction (insoluble fraction of 10% KOH-extracted hemicelluloses) seemed to be the only one related to the elongation process and subsequent rigidity. During normal growth a decrease was observed in the total amount of galactose, mainly from the pectic fractions. The inhibition of elongation led to an increase in the amount of the cell walls, due to inhibition of cellular elongation. PEG prevented the increase in the hemicelluloses and the α-cellulose, indicating that these changes were related to elongation. Thus, during the inhibition of elongation there is probably an inhibition of new synthesis that prevents cell wall rigidity and maintains cell wall growth capacity. Changes in the pectic fractions during growth were not affected by the inhibition of elongation, showing that these fractions are related to cell wall loosening rather than to elongation. Study of the cell wall composition confirms the idea that the autolytic process is regulated by changes in the cell wall structure during epicotyl growth  相似文献   

19.
The cell-wall composition of carrot (Daucus carota L.) cells has been studied during their growth in suspension culture. Pectic and hemicellulosic polymers were fractionated according to molecular size by a Sepharose 4B column. Polyuronides in the pectic fraction were resolved into high- and low-molecular-weight components. The low-molecular-weight polyuronides were relatively free of neutral sugars and showed a marked increase during the growth of the cell wall. Hemicellulosic polysaccharides were of disperse molecular size. As cell expansion proceeded, the contents of glucose and xylose in the high-molecular-weight region increased while those in the low-molecular-weight fraction decreased. Removal of auxin from the medium apparently caused degradation of high-molecular-weight polymers in both the pectic and hemicellulosic fractions.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated the effect of salinity on the development of seedlings of Vigna unguiculata. At various time intervals, the hypocotyls were measured to estimate the effect of salt concentration on growth parameters. Control plants were tallest and had the greatest fresh weights, whereas these values were lowest in seedlings treated with high levels of salt. Three hydrogen donors -- caffeic acid, ferulic acid, and pyrogalol - were studied to determine the changes in peroxidase activity for both cytoplasmic and wall-bound fractions. Activity was inversely correlated with hypocotyl elongation. A clear concentration effect was also observed for contents of pectic polysaccharides, low-molecular-weight xyloglucan, and high-molecular-weight xyloglucan, with control seedlings showing lower levels of those wall components than that recorded in the salt-treated seedlings. Here, we also discuss the role of peroxidase and wall components in hypocotyl elongation and growth ofVigna when seedlings undergo saline stress.  相似文献   

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