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1.
Action of xylogalacturonan hydrolase (XGH) towards xylogalacturonan (XGA) present in the alkali saponified “modified hairy regions” from potato and apple pectin was studied.

Analysis of enzymatic degradation products from XGA in these complex pectins demonstrated that the degradable xylogalacturonans from both sources have a similar xylose side chain distribution. The disaccharide β-d-Xyl-(1,3)-GalA was the predominant product from these substrates.

The number of enzymatic degradation products from xylogalacturonan present in apple and potato pectin was much lower than the number of products from a xylogalacturonan derived from Gum Tragacanth. This suggests a relatively uniform distribution of xylose in the degradable part of XGA from apple and potato pectin. In addition, dimeric side chains of xylose were observed in digests of XGA from both pectins, which apparently did not hinder the action of XGH. From this it is assumed that Xyl–Xyl as well as Xyl substituted GalA residues are accepted in subsite −1 of xylogalacturonan hydrolase.  相似文献   


2.
A combination of xylogalacturonan (XGA), homogalacturonan, and rhamnogalacturonan was extracted from watermelon fruit cell walls with 0.1 M NaOH. In contrast to the resistance of xylogalacturonans from most other sources to endopolygalacturonase (EPG), about 50% of the extracted XGA could be converted into oligosaccharides by EPG digestion with a commercial EPG from Megazyme International. The oligosaccharides were fractionated by ion-exchange chromatography, and their structures were investigated by mass spectrometry and NMR spectroscopy. The smallest oligosaccharide was beta-D-Xylp-(1-->3)-alpha-D-GalAp-(1-->4)-alpha-D-GalAp-(1-->4)-alpha-D-GalAp-(1-->4)-GalAp. The most abundant was beta-D-Xylp-(1-->3)-alpha-D-GalAp-(1-->4)-alpha-D-GalAp-(1-->4)(beta-D-Xylp-(1-->3)-alpha-D-GalAp-(1-->4))-alpha-D-GalAp-(1-->4)-alpha-D-GalAp-(1-->4)-GalAp. Given that the nonreducing ends of the oligosaccharides often were xylosylated GalA residues, and that fungal EPG digests homogalacturonans between the third and fourth GalA bound to the enzyme, it appears that EPG can accommodate a xylosylated GalA in the site that binds the fourth GalA. Since all of the oligosaccharides characterized had three unsubstituted GalA residues at their reducing ends, the enzyme appears not to accommodate xylosylated residues in the first three sugar-binding sites. Thus, XGA regions with fewer than three unsubstituted residues between branch points will be resistant to EPG. The EPG-susceptible XGA was not recovered from cell walls prepared using phosphate buffer for the homogenization of the watermelon tissue, probably because it was degraded by endogenous watermelon EPG and lost during isolation of the walls. Use of Tris-buffered phenol during wall isolation to prevent enzyme action caused some amidation of GalA residues with Tris.  相似文献   

3.
Xylogalacturonan (XGA) is a class of pectic polysaccharide found in plant cell walls. The Arabidopsis thaliana locus At5g33290 encodes a predicted Type II membrane protein, and insertion mutants of the At5g33290 locus had decreased cell wall xylose. Immunological studies, enzymatic extraction of polysaccharides, monosaccharide linkage analysis, and oligosaccharide mass profiling were employed to identify the affected cell wall polymer. Pectic XGA was reduced to much lower levels in mutant than in wild-type leaves, indicating a role of At5g33290 in XGA biosynthesis. The mutated gene was designated xylogalacturonan deficient1 (xgd1). Transformation of the xgd1-1 mutant with the wild-type gene restored XGA to wild-type levels. XGD1 protein heterologously expressed in Nicotiana benthamiana catalyzed the transfer of xylose from UDP-xylose onto oligogalacturonides and endogenous acceptors. The products formed could be hydrolyzed with an XGA-specific hydrolase. These results confirm that the XGD1 protein is a XGA xylosyltransferase. The protein was shown by expression of a fluorescent fusion protein in N. benthamiana to be localized in the Golgi vesicles as expected for a glycosyltransferase involved in pectin biosynthesis.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract

A method was developed to make xylogalacturonans (XGAs) with different degrees of xyloslyation from gum tragacanth (XGA-25, XGA-29, XGA-35 and XGA-47), using alkali treatment at 4°C and acid treatment at 100°C. Ester linkages as well as fucose and arabinose substituents could selectively be removed by this procedure. Galactosyl- and xylosyl-linkages appeared to be more stable, while some backbone degradation of the galacturonan took place upon prolonged acid treatment. Using XGA-35, endoxylogalacturonan hydrolase (XGH) from Aspergillus tubingensis, expressed in Kluyveromyces lactis, was characterised with respect to kinetic parameters, temperature and pH effects.

XGA-25 and XGA-47 were degraded with endopolygalacturonases (PGs) from Aspergillus niger (PG1, PG2), from A. tubingensis (PF-arf), from Kluyveromyces fragilis (PG-kluyv) and XGH from A. tubingensis. The activity of the different PGs decreased with increasing degrees of xylosylation. However, for each PG a different tolerance for the presence of side chains was observed. PG-arf and PG1 were hindered most by xylosyl branching, whereas XGH appeared to have a requirement for xylosylation and was almost not active towards polygalacturonic acid. The degradability of xylogalacturonans by XGH increased with higher degrees of xylosylation. Typically, a highly substituted xylogalacturonan from pea was almost resistant to XGH treatment. XGH produces a distinctive set of oligosaccharides from XGA, which is different from the hydrolysis products of PG action.

Saponified modified hairy regions from apple (MHR-S) containing xylogalacturonan, were partially degraded by XGH. A combination of XGH and rhamnogalacturonan hydrolase was able to fully degrade the high molecular weight fraction of MHR-S. The two enzymes acted additively, no synergy being observed.  相似文献   

5.
The mode of action of xylanase A from a phytopathogenic bacterium, Erwinia chrysanthemi, classified in glycoside hydrolase family 5, was investigated on xylooligosaccharides and polysaccharides using TLC, MALDI-TOF MS and enzyme treatment with exoglycosidases. The hydrolytic action of xylanase A was found to be absolutely dependent on the presence of 4-O-methyl-D-glucuronosyl (MeGlcA) side residues in both oligosaccharides and polysaccharides. Neutral linear beta-1,4-xylooligosaccharides and esterified aldouronic acids were resistant towards enzymatic action. Aldouronic acids of the structure MeGlcA(3)Xyl(3) (aldotetraouronic acid), MeGlcA(3)Xyl(4) (aldopentaouronic acid) and MeGlcA(3)Xyl(5) (aldohexaouronic acid) were cleaved with the enzyme to give xylose from the reducing end and products shorter by one xylopyranosyl residue: MeGlcA(2)Xyl(2), MeGlcA(2)Xyl(3) and MeGlcA(2)Xyl(4). As a rule, the enzyme attacked the second glycosidic linkage following the MeGlcA branch towards the reducing end. Depending on the distribution of MeGlcA residues on the glucuronoxylan main chain, the enzyme generated series of shorter and longer aldouronic acids of backbone polymerization degree 3-14, in which the MeGlcA is linked exclusively to the second xylopyranosyl residue from the reducing end. Upon incubation with beta-xylosidase, all acidic hydrolysis products of acidic oligosaccharides and hardwood glucuronoxylans were converted to aldotriouronic acid, MeGlcA(2)Xyl(2). In agreement with this mode of action, xylose and unsubstituted oligosaccharides were essentially absent in the hydrolysates. The E. chrysanthemi xylanase A thus appears to be an excellent biocatalyst for the production of large acidic oligosaccharides from glucuronoxylans as well as an invaluable tool for determination of the distribution of MeGlcA residues along the main chain of this major plant hemicellulose.  相似文献   

6.
Carrot arabinogalactan proteins are interlinked with pectins   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Cell wall extracts from a carrot cell culture and tap roots were obtained by sequential extraction with water, EDTA buffer solution and cold sodium hydroxide solution. Arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs) were isolated from the extracts and from the medium of the cell culture and analysed for their molecular weight distribution and carbohydrate composition. Copper ions were used to separate the Yariv positive fractions into AGP fractions with a high and a low level of galacturonic acid (GalA). The GalA rich AGP fractions were incubated with pectin methylesterase and polygalacturonase. This enzyme incubation released GalA fragments from the AGP fractions as monitored by HPAEC and MALDI-TOF MS. At least part of carrot AGPs from the medium and cell walls may be covalently linked to pectin containing a homogalacturonan structural element.  相似文献   

7.
Driselase-digestion of cell walls from suspension-cultures of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.), followed by anion-exchange chromatography, gel-permeation chromatography, preparative paper chromatography and preparative paper electrophoresis, yielded ten uronic acid-containing products in addition to free galacturonic acid (GalA). These included 4-O-methylglucuronic acid, alpha-L-rhamnopyranosyl-(1-->4)-D-glucuronic acid and several oligosaccharides containing GalA residues. The structures were unambiguously determined by a combination of 1- and 2-dimensional NMR spectroscopic techniques. Five of the six homogalacturonan-derived oligosaccharides purified contained 3-O-acetyl-GalA residues; however, methyl-esterified GalA residues occurred adjacent to both 2-O-acetyl-GalA and 3-O-acetyl-GalA residues. An acetylated, rhamnogalacturonan-I-derived oligosaccharide that was purified also contained 3-O-acetyl-GalA residues. Taken together with published data, our findings indicate considerable diversity in the patterns of pectin esterification. The implications for the action of pectin esterases are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Homogalacturonan-derived partly methylated and/or acetylated oligogalacturonates were recovered after enzymatic hydrolysis (endo-polygalacturonase+pectin methyl esterase+side-chain degrading enzymes) of sugar beet pectin followed by anion-exchange and size exclusion chromatography. Around 90% of the GalA and 75% of the acetyl groups present in the initial sugar beet pectin were recovered as homogalacturonan-derived oligogalacturonates, the remaining GalA and acetyl belonging to rhamnogalacturonic regions. Around 50% of the acetyl groups present in sugar beet homogalacturonans were recovered as partly methylated and/or acetylated oligogalacturonates of degree of polymerisation 5 whose structures were determined by electrospray ionization ion trap mass spectrometry (ESI-IT-MSn). 2-O-acetyl- and 3-O-acetyl-GalA were detected in roughly similar amounts but 2,3-di-O-acetylation was absent. Methyl-esterified GalA residues occurred mainly upstream 2-O-acetyl GalA. Oligogalacturonates containing GalA residues that are at once methyl- and acetyl-esterified were recovered in very limited amounts. A tentative mapping of the distribution of acetyl and methyl esters within sugar beet homogalacturonans is proposed. Unsubstituted GalA residues are likely to be present in limited amounts (approximately 10% of total GalA residues), due to the fact that methyl and acetyl groups are assumed to be most often not carried by the same residues.  相似文献   

9.
Biosynthesis of pectin   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Pectin consists of a group of acidic polysaccharides that constitute a large part of the cell wall of plants. The pectic polysaccharides have a complex structure but can generally be divided into homogalacturonan, rhamnogalacturonan I, rhamnogalacturonan II (RGII) and xylogalacturonan (XGA). These polysaccharides appear to be present in all cells but their relative abundance and structural details differ between cell types and species. Pectin is synthesized in the Golgi vesicles and its complexity dictates that a large number of enzymes must be involved in the process. The biosynthetic enzymes required are glycosyltransferases and decorating enzymes including methyltransferases, acetyltransferases and feruloyltransferases. Biochemical methods successfully led to the recent identification of a pectin biosynthetic galacturonosyltransferase (GAUT1), and recent functional genomics and mutant studies have allowed the identification of several biosynthetic enzymes involved in making different parts of pectin. Strong evidence has been obtained for two xylosyltransferases (RGXT1 and RGXT2) with documented in vitro activity and apparently involved in making a side chain of RGII. Strong circumstantial evidence has been obtained for a putative glucuronosyltransferase (GUT1) involved in making RGII, a putative arabinosyltransferase (ARAD1) involved in making arabinan, and a putative xylosyltransferase (XGD1) involved in making XGA. In several other cases, enzymes have been identified as involved in making pectin but because of ambiguity in the cell wall compositions of mutants and lack of direct biochemical evidence their specific activities are more uncertain.  相似文献   

10.
Background and aims Cress-seed (Lepidium sativum) exudate exerts an allelochemical effect, promoting excessive hypocotyl elongation and inhibiting root growth in neighbouring Amaranthus caudatus seedlings. We investigated acidic disaccharides present in cress-seed exudate, testing the proposal that the allelochemical is an oligosaccharin—lepidimoic acid (LMA; 4-deoxy-β-l-threo-hex-4-enopyranuronosyl-(1→2)-l-rhamnose).Methods Cress-seed exudate was variously treated [heating, ethanolic precipitation, solvent partitioning, high-voltage paper electrophoresis and gel-permeation chromatography (GPC)], and the products were bioassayed for effects on dark-grown Amaranthus seedlings. Two acidic disaccharides, including LMA, were isolated and characterized by electrophoresis, thin-layer chromatography (TLC) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and then bioassayed.Key Results Cress-seed exudate contained low-Mr, hydrophilic, heat-stable material that strongly promoted Amaranthus hypocotyl elongation and inhibited root growth, but that separated from LMA on electrophoresis and GPC. Cress-seed exudate contained ∼250 µm LMA, whose TLC and electrophoretic mobilities, susceptibility to mild acid hydrolysis and NMR spectra are reported. A second acidic disaccharide, present at ∼120 µm, was similarly characterized, and shown to be β-d-xylopyranosyl-(1→3)-d-galacturonic acid (Xyl→GalA), a repeat unit of xylogalacturonan. Purified LMA and Xyl→GalA when applied at 360 and 740 µm, respectively, only slightly promoted Amaranthus hypocotyl growth, but equally promoted root growth and thus had no effect on the hypocotyl:root ratio, unlike total cress-seed exudate.Conclusions LMA is present in cress seeds, probably formed by rhamnogalacturonan lyase action on rhamnogalacturonan-I during seed development. Our results contradict the hypothesis that LMA is a cress allelochemical that appreciably perturbs the growth of potentially competing seedlings. Since LMA and Xyl→GalA slightly promoted both hypocotyl and root elongation, their effect could be nutritional. We conclude that rhamnogalacturonan-I and xylogalacturonan (pectin domains) are not sources of oligosaccharins with allelochemical activity, and the biological roles (if any) of the disaccharides derived from them are unknown. The main allelochemical principle in cress-seed exudate remains to be identified.  相似文献   

11.
李敏  王垠  牟晓飞  王洋  阎秀峰 《生态学报》2012,32(7):1987-1994
芥子酸酯(sinapate esters)是拟南芥和其他十字花科植物中大量存在的一类具有紫外吸收作用的羟基肉桂酸衍生物,有研究表明其紫外吸收能力甚至强于类黄酮。以模式植物拟南芥(Arabidopsis thaliana)为实验材料,通过施加低强度(40 μW/cm2)、相对长时间(7 d)的UV-B辐射,考察了拟南芥幼苗和成苗芥子酸酯组分(芥子酰葡萄糖、芥子酰苹果酸)和含量及合成途径关键酶编码基因表达水平对UV-B辐射的响应。经过7 d的UV-B辐射处理,拟南芥幼苗和成苗的芥子酰葡萄糖、芥子酰苹果酸含量均高于对照植株,芥子酸酯表现为响应UV-B辐射而积累。无论是幼苗还是成苗,叶片中芥子酰苹果酸的含量都要比芥子酰葡萄糖高出一个数量级,而且在UV-B处理过程中观察到芥子酰葡萄糖含量减少而芥子酰苹果酸含量增加,催化芥子酰葡萄糖生成芥子酰苹果酸的芥子酰葡萄糖苹果酸转移酶编码基因的表达水平也显著提高,说明芥子酰苹果酸在拟南芥叶片响应UV-B辐射过程中起重要作用并优先合成。另外,拟南芥幼苗中两种芥子酸酯的含量是成苗中的数十倍之多,芥子酸酯合成途径关键酶编码基因fah1sng1的相对表达量也显著高于成苗。同时,在响应UV-B辐射的过程中,幼苗中芥子酰葡萄糖、芥子酰苹果酸含量的变化幅度(分别是7.01%、6.05%)远远低于成苗叶片中芥子酰葡萄糖、芥子酰苹果酸含量的变化幅度(分别是21.88%、70.63%),这可能意味着拟南芥叶片中芥子酸酯对于UV-B辐射的防护作用,幼苗属于组成型防御(constitutive defense),而到成苗则转变为诱导型防御(inducible defense)。  相似文献   

12.
The methylesterification status of cell wall pectins, mediated through the interplay of pectin methylesterases (PMEs) and pectin methylesterase inhibitors (PMEIs), influences the biophysical properties of plant cell walls. We found that the overexpression of a PMEI gene in Arabidopsis thaliana plants caused the stems to develop twists and loops, most strongly around points on the stem where leaves or inflorescences failed to separate from the main stem. Altered elasticity of the stem, underdevelopment of the leaf cuticle, and changes in the sugar composition of the cell walls of stems were evident in the PMEI overexpression lines. We discuss the mechanisms that potentially underlie the aberrant growth phenotypes.  相似文献   

13.
Duan J  Zheng Y  Dong Q  Fang J 《Phytochemistry》2004,65(5):609-615
A pectic polysaccharide DL-2A with a molar mass of 8.5 x 10(5), was obtained from the boiling water extract of Diospyros kaki leaves. It had [alpha]20D -21.8 degrees (c 0.22, H2O) and consisted of rhamnose, arabinose, galactose, xylose and galacturonic acid units in the molar ratio of 0.4:3.4:2.4:1.0:0.8, along with traces of glucuronic acid. About 16.7% of galacturonic acid existed as the methyl ester. A combination of linkage analyses, periodate oxidation, partial acid hydrolysis, selective lithium-degraded reaction, ESIMS, 1H- and 13C- NMR spectral analyses revealed its structural features. It was found that DL-2A possessed an alpha-(1-->4)-galacturonan backbone with some insertions of alpha-1,2-Rhap residues. The side-chains of arabino-3,6-galactan were attached to the backbone via O-4 of Rhap residues and O-3 of GalAp residues, while 4-linked xylose residues (forming short linear chains) were directly linked to O-4 of rhamnose residues, not as part of the xylogalacturonan. These novel structural features enlarge the knowledge on the fine structure of pectic substances in the plant kingdom.  相似文献   

14.
Microsomal membranes from etiolated wheat (Triticum aestivum) seedlings cooperatively incorporated xylose (Xyl), arabinose, and glucuronic acid residues from their corresponding uridine 5'-diphosphosugars into an ethanol-insoluble glucurono(arabino)xylan (GAX)-like product. A glucuronyltransferase activity that is enhanced by the presence of UDP-Xyl was also identified in these microsomes. Wheat glucuronyltransferase activity was optimal at pH 7 and required manganese ions, and several lines of evidence suggest its involvement in GAX-like biosynthesis. The GAX characteristics of the 14C-product were confirmed by digestion with a purified endo-xylanase from Aspergillus awamori (endo-xylanase III) and by total acid hydrolysis, resulting in a Xyl:arabinose:glucuronic acid molar ratio of approximately 105:34:1. Endo-xylanase III released only three types of oligosaccharides in addition to free Xyl. No radiolabel was released as xylobiose, xylotriose, or xylotetraose, indicating the absence of long stretches of unbranched Xyl residues in the nascent GAX-like product. High-pH anion exchange chromatography analysis of the resulting oligosaccharides along with known arabinoxylan oligosaccharide standards suggests that a portion of the nascent GAX-like product has a relatively regular structure. The other portion of the [14C]GAX-like polymer was resistant to proteinase K, endo-polygalacturonase, and endo-xylanase III (GH11 family) but was degraded by Driselase, supporting the hypothesis that the xylan backbone in this portion of the product is most likely highly substituted. Size exclusion chromatography indicated that the nascent GAX-like polymer had an apparent molecular mass of approximately 10 to 15 kD; however, mature GAXs from wheat cell walls had larger apparent molecular masses (>66 kD).  相似文献   

15.
This study deals with the chemical characterization of a capsular polysaccharide (CPS) produced by a thermal biomass largely comprising the cyanobacterium Mastigocladus laminosus. The sugar moiety of this polymer is composed of seven neutral monosaccharides (Rha, Fuc, Ara, Xyl, Man, GIc, Gal) and two uronic acids (GalA, GIcA). Proteins represent 18% of the dry weight of the CPS. Organic acid substituents (acetate, pyruvate, succinate) were also detected and estimated by high-performance liquid chromatography. The presence of sulfate groups (5% w/w) was observed, which represents a relatively rare feature for cyanobacteria. Acidic hydrolysis of the purified polysaccharide led to the isolation of four oligosaccharidic fractions. NMR spectroscopy studies of two of the four purified oligosaccharides allowed them to be identified as: GlcA(1→2)GalA(1→2)Man and GlcA(1→2)βMan(1→4)βGal(1→2)Rha  相似文献   

16.
Pectin structure and biosynthesis   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Pectin is structurally and functionally the most complex polysaccharide in plant cell walls. Pectin has functions in plant growth, morphology, development, and plant defense and also serves as a gelling and stabilizing polymer in diverse food and specialty products and has positive effects on human health and multiple biomedical uses. Pectin is a family of galacturonic acid-rich polysaccharides including homogalacturonan, rhamnogalacturonan I, and the substituted galacturonans rhamnogalacturonan II (RG-II) and xylogalacturonan (XGA). Pectin biosynthesis is estimated to require at least 67 transferases including glycosyl-, methyl-, and acetyltransferases. New developments in understanding pectin structure, function, and biosynthesis indicate that these polysaccharides have roles in both primary and secondary cell walls. Manipulation of pectin synthesis is expected to impact diverse plant agronomical properties including plant biomass characteristics important for biofuel production.  相似文献   

17.
Composition and content of glucosinolates in developing Arabidopsis thaliana   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
Petersen BL  Chen S  Hansen CH  Olsen CE  Halkier BA 《Planta》2002,214(4):562-571
The glucosinolate composition and content in various tissues of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. ecotype Columbia during development from seeds to bolting plants were determined in detail by high-performance liquid chromatography. Comparison of the glucosinolate profiles of leaves, roots and stems from mature plants with those of green siliques and mature seeds indicated that a majority of the seed glucosinolates were synthesized de novo in the silique. A comparison of the glucosinolate profile of mature seeds with that of cotyledons indicated that a major part of seed glucosinolates was retained in the cotyledons. Turnover of glucosinolates was studied by germination of seeds containing radiolabelled p-hydroxybenzylglucosinolate (p-OHBG). Approximately 70% of the content of [14C]p-OHBG in the seeds was detected in seedlings at the cotyledon stage and [14C]p-OHBG was barely detectable in young plants with rosettes of six to eight leaves. The turn-over of p-OHBG was found to coincide with the expression of the glucosinolate-degrading enzyme myrosinase, which was detectable at very low levels in seedlings at the cotyledon stage, but which dramatically increased in leaves from plants at later developmental stages. This indicates that there is a continuous turnover of glucosinolates during development and not only upon tissue disruption.  相似文献   

18.
We have previously isolated mannoside and xylomannoside oligosaccharides with one or two terminal reducingN-acetylglucosamine residues from the extracellular medium of white campion (Silene alba) suspension culture. We have now demonstrated the presence of peptide-N 4-(N-acetylglucosaminyl)asparagine amidase (PNGase) activity in cell extracts as well in the culture medium that could explain the production of those compounds. An additional xylomannoside, (GlcNAc)Man3(Xyl)GlcNAc(Fuc)GlcNAc, was characterized, and1H- and13C-NMR assignments for the oligosaccharide Man3(Xyl)GlcNAc(Fuc)GlcNAc were obtained using homonuclear and heteronuclear spectroscopy (COSY).Abbreviations Endo endo--N-acetylglucosaminidase - Fuc fucose - GlcNAc N-acetylglucosamine - Man mannose - NMR nuclear magnetic resonance - PNGase peptide-N 4-(N-acetylglucosaminyl)asparagine amidase - Xyl xylose  相似文献   

19.
20.
Twelve grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.) cultivars were surveyed for 'cyanide potential' (i.e. the total cyanide measured in beta-glucosidase-treated crude, boiled tissue extract) in mature leaves. Two related cultivars (Carignan and Ruby Cabernet) had mean cyanide potential (equivalent to 110 mgHCNkg-1fr.wt) ca. 25-fold greater than that of the other 10 cultivars, and so the trait is polymorphic in the species. In boiled leaf extracts of Carignan and Ruby Cabernet, free cyanide constituted a negligible fraction of the total cyanide potential because beta-glucosidase treatment was required to liberate the major cyanide fraction - which is therefore bound in glucosylated cyanogenic compound(s) (or cyanogenic glucosides). In addition, cyanide was liberated from ground leaf tissue of Ruby Cabernet but not Sultana (a cultivar with low cyanide potential). Hence, the high cyanide potential in Ruby Cabernet leaves is coupled with endogenous beta-glucosidase(s) activity and this cultivar may be considered 'cyanogenic'. A method was developed to detect and identify cyanogenic glucosides using liquid chromatography combined with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Two putative cyanogenic glucosides were found in extracts from leaves of Carignan and Ruby Cabernet and were identified as the epimers prunasin and sambunigrin. Cyanide potential measured at three times over the growing season in young and mature leaves, petioles, tendrils, flowers, berries, seeds and roots of Ruby Cabernet was substantially higher in the leaves compared with all other tissues. This characterisation of cyanogenic glucoside accumulation in grapevine provides a basis for gauging the involvement of the trait in interactions of the species with its pests and pathogens.  相似文献   

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