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1.
Trocha P  Daly JM 《Plant physiology》1974,53(4):527-532
Polymeric carbohydrates in 14C-labeled germ tube and uredospore walls of Uromyces phaseoli var. typica were studied by permethylation and by enzymatic hydrolysis. The native structure of the uredospore wall limited the effectiveness of both techniques with this wall, but evidence for two distinct polysaccharides was obtained. A linear (1→3) glucan, containing minor quantities of (1→6) linkages, may account for most of the glucose in the uredospore wall. A second uredospore polymer was a glucomannan similar to one reported for other rust fungi in that it consisted of approximately equal numbers of β(1→3) and β(1→4) mannosidic linkages with glucose as a minor component at the nonreducing end. Branching, most likely by (1→6) mannose links, was low. In contrast to uredospore wall, considerably more germ tube polysaccharide was accessible to enzymes and to methylation. Methylation studies indicate that (1→3) glucose and mannose bonds occur predominantly. Evidence from hydrolysis with exo- (β)-(1→3) glucanase suggests distinct wall regions of β(1→3) glycan, highly branched by (1→6) bonds, as well as wall regions of a glucomannan with alternating (1→3) glucose and (1→3) mannose residues. Polymer heterogeneity was indicated by differences in the proportions of mannose, glucose, and galactose as reducing end groups in different solubility fractions. In germ tube walls, but not in uredospore walls, glucosamine apparently existed as part of chitin polymer as evidenced by the isolation of N,N-diacetylchitobiose from chitinase digestion.  相似文献   

2.
The innate immune system differentially recognizes Candida albicans yeast and hyphae. It is not clear how the innate immune system effectively discriminates between yeast and hyphal forms of C. albicans. Glucans are major components of the fungal cell wall and key fungal pathogen-associated molecular patterns. C. albicans yeast glucan has been characterized; however, little is known about glucan structure in C. albicans hyphae. Using an extraction procedure that minimizes degradation of the native structure, we extracted glucans from C. albicans hyphal cell walls. 1H NMR data analysis revealed that, when compared with reference (1→3,1→6) β-linked glucans and C. albicans yeast glucan, hyphal glucan has a unique cyclical or “closed chain” structure that is not found in yeast glucan. GC/MS analyses showed a high abundance of 3- and 6-linked glucose units when compared with yeast β-glucan. In addition to the expected (1→3), (1→6), and 3,6 linkages, we also identified a 2,3 linkage that has not been reported previously in C. albicans. Hyphal glucan induced robust immune responses in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and macrophages via a Dectin-1-dependent mechanism. In contrast, C. albicans yeast glucan was a much less potent stimulus. We also demonstrated the capacity of C. albicans hyphal glucan, but not yeast glucan, to induce IL-1β processing and secretion. This finding provides important evidence for understanding the immune discrimination between colonization and invasion at the mucosal level. When taken together, these data provide a structural basis for differential innate immune recognition of C. albicans yeast versus hyphae.  相似文献   

3.
The ultrastructure of isolated cell walls of Saccharomyces cerevisiae from the log and stationary phases of growth was studied after treatment with the following enzymes: purified endo-β-(1 → 3)-glucanase and endo-β-(1 → 6)-glucanase produced by Bacillus circulans; purified exo-β-glucanase and endo-β-(1 → 3)-glucanase produced by Schizosaccharomyces versatilis; commercial Pronase. While exo-β-glucanase from S. versatilis had no electron microscopically detectable effect on the walls, Pronase removed part of the external amorphous wall material disclosing an amorphous wall layer in which fibrils were indistinctly visible. Amorphous wall material was completely removed by the effect of either endo-β-(1 → 3)- or endo-β-(1 → 6)-glucanase of B. circulans or by a mixture of the two enzymes. As a result of these treatments a continuous fibrillar component appeared, composed of densely interwoven microfibrils resisting further action by both of the B. circulans enzymes. The fibrillar wall component was also demonstrated in untreated cell walls by electron microscopy after negative staining. Because of the complete disappearance of the fibrils following treatment with the S. versatilis endo-β-(1 → 3)-glucanase it can be concluded that this fibrillar component is composed of β-(1 → 3)-linked glucan. Bud scars were the only wall structures resistant to the effect of the latter enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Lactobacillus reuteri strain ATCC 55730 (LB BIO) was isolated as a pure culture from a Reuteri tablet purchased from the BioGaia company. This probiotic strain produces a soluble glucan (reuteran), in which the majority of the linkages are of the α-(1→4) glucosidic type (~70%). This reuteran also contains α-(1→6)- linked glucosyl units and 4,6-disubstituted α-glucosyl units at the branching points. The LB BIO glucansucrase gene (gtfO) was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, and the GTFO enzyme was purified. The recombinant GTFO enzyme and the LB BIO culture supernatants synthesized identical glucan polymers with respect to linkage type and size distribution. GTFO thus is a reuteransucrase, responsible for synthesis of this reuteran polymer in LB BIO. The preference of GTFO for synthesizing α-(1→4) linkages is also evident from the oligosaccharides produced from sucrose with different acceptor substrates, e.g., isopanose from isomaltose. GTFO has a relatively high hydrolysis/transferase activity ratio. Complete conversion of 100 mM sucrose by GTFO nevertheless yielded large amounts of reuteran, although more than 50% of sucrose was converted into glucose. This is only the second example of the isolation and characterization of a reuteransucrase and its reuteran product, both found in different L. reuteri strains. GTFO synthesizes a reuteran with the highest amount of α-(1→4) linkages reported to date.  相似文献   

5.
Tsai CM  Hassid WZ 《Plant physiology》1973,51(6):998-1001
UDP-d-glucose, at a micromolar level in the presence of MgCl2 and oat (Avena sativa) coleoptile particulate enzyme which contains both β-(1 → 3) and β-(1 → 4) glucan synthetases, produces glucan with mainly β-(1 → 4) glucosyl linkages. An activation of β-(1 → 3) glucan synthetase by UDP-d-glucose and a decrease in the formation of β-(1 → 3) glucan in the presence of MgCl2 have been observed. However, at high substrate concentration (≥ 10−4m), the activation of β-(1 → 3) glucan synthetase is so pronounced that the formation of β-(1 → 3) glucosyl linkage predominates in synthesized glucan regardless of the presence of MgCl2. These observations may explain the striking shift in the composition of glucan of particulate enzyme from a β-(1 → 4) to β-(1 → 3) glucosyl linkage when UDP-d-glucose concentration is raised from a low concentration (≤ 10−5m) to a higher concentration (≥ 10−4m).  相似文献   

6.
Evidence is presented for the existence of a noncellulosic β-1,3-glucan in cotton fibers. The glucan can be isolated as distinct fractions of varying solubility. When fibers are homogenized rigorously in aqueous buffer, part of the total β-1,3-glucan is found as a soluble polymer in homogenates freed of cell walls. The proportion of total β-1,3-glucan which is found as the soluble polymer varies somewhat as a function of fiber age. The insoluble fraction of the β-1,3-glucan remains associated with the cell wall fraction. Of this cell wall β-1,3-glucan, a variable portion can be solubilized by treatment of walls with hot water, a further portion can be solubilized by alkaline extraction of the walls, and 17 to 29% of the glucan remains associated with cellulose even after alkaline extraction. A portion of this glucan can also be removed from the cell walls of intact cotton fibers by digestion with an endo-β-1,3-glucanase. The glucan fraction which can be isolated as a soluble polymer in homogenates freed of cell walls is not associated with membranous material, and we propose that it represents glucan which is also extracellular but not tightly associated with the cell wall. Enzyme digestion studies indicate that all of the cotton fiber glucan is β-linked, and methylation analyses and enzyme studies both show that the predominant linkage in the glucan is 1 → 3. The possibility of some minor branching at C-6 can also be deduced from the methylation analyses. The timing of deposition of the β-1,3-glucan during fiber development coincides closely with the onset of secondary wall cellulose synthesis. Kinetic studies performed with ovules and fibers cultured in vitro show that incorporation of radioactivity from [14C]glucose into β-1,3-glucan is linear with respect to time almost from the start of the labeling period; however, a lag is observed before incorporation into cellulose becomes linear with time, suggesting that these two different glucans are not polymerized directly from the same substrate pool. Pulse-chase experiments indicate that neither the β-1,3-glucan nor cellulose exhibits significant turnover after synthesis.  相似文献   

7.
The composition of the cell wall of Fusicoccum amygdali   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
1. The cell wall of Fusicoccum amygdali consisted of polysaccharides (85%), protein (4–6%), lipid (5%) and phosphorus (0.1%). 2. The main carbohydrate constituent was d-glucose; smaller amounts of d-glucosamine, d-galactose, d-mannose, l-rhamnose, xylose and arabinose were also identified, and 16 common amino acids were detected. 3. Chitin, which accounted for most of the cell-wall glucosamine, was isolated in an undegraded form by an enzymic method. Chitosan was not detected, but traces of glucosamine were found in alkali-soluble and water-soluble fractions. 4. Cell walls were stained dark blue by iodine and were attacked by α-amylase, with liberation of glucose, maltose and maltotriose, indicating the existence of chains of α-(1→4)-linked glucopyranose residues. 5. Glucose and gentiobiose were liberated from cell walls by the action of an exo-β-(1→3)-glucanase, giving evidence for both β-(1→3)- and β-(1→6)-glucopyranose linkages. 6. Incubation of cell walls with Helix pomatia digestive enzymes released glucose, N-acetyl-d-glucosamine and a non-diffusible fraction, containing most of the cell-wall galactose, mannose and rhamnose. Part of this fraction was released by incubating cell walls with Pronase; acid hydrolysis yielded galactose 6-phosphate and small amounts of mannose 6-phosphate and glucose 6-phosphate as well as other materials. Extracellular polysaccharides of a similar nature were isolated and may be formed by the action of lytic enzymes on the cell wall. 7. About 30% of the cell wall was resistant to the action of the H. pomatia digestive enzymes; the resistant fraction was shown to be a predominantly α-(1→3)-glucan. 8. Fractionation of the cell-wall complex with 1m-sodium hydroxide gave three principal glucan fractions: fraction BB had [α]D +236° (in 1m-sodium hydroxide) and showed two components on sedimentation analysis; fraction AA2 had [α]D −71° (in 1m-sodium hydroxide) and contained predominantly β-linkages; fraction AA1 had [α]D +40° (in 1m-sodium hydroxide) and may contain both α- and β-linkages.  相似文献   

8.
Lysis of Yeast Cell Walls: Glucanases from Bacillus circulans WL-12   总被引:7,自引:1,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Endo-β-(1 → 3)- and endo-β-(1 → 6)-glucanases are produced in high concentration in the culture fluid of Bacillus circulans WL-12 when grown in a mineral medium with bakers' yeast cell walls as the sole carbon source. Much lower enzyme levels were found when laminarin, pustulan, or mannitol was the substrate. The two enzyme activities were well separated during Sephadex G-100 chromatography. The endo-β-(1 → 3)-glucanase was further purified by diethylaminoethyl-cellulose and hydroxyapatite chromatography, whereas the endo-β-(1 → 6)-glucanase could be purified further by diethylamino-ethyl-cellulose and carboxymethyl cellulose chromatography. The endo-β-(1 → 3)-glucanase was specific for the β-(1 → 3)-glucosidic bond, but it did not hydrolyze laminaribiose; laminaritriose was split very slowly. β-(1 → 4)-Bonds in oat glucan in which the glucosyl moiety is substituted in the 3-position were also cleaved. The kinetics of laminarin hydrolysis (optimum pH 5.0) were complex but appeared to follow Michaelis-Menten theory, especially at the lower substrate concentrations. Glucono-δ-lactone was a noncompetitive inhibitor and Hg2+ inhibited strongly. The enzyme has no metal ion requirements or essential sulfhydryl groups. The purified β-(1 → 6)-glucanase has an optimum pH of 5.5, and its properties were studied in less detail. In contrast to the crude culture fluid, the two purified β-glucanases have only a very limited hydrolytic action on cell wall of either bakers' yeast or of Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Although our previous work had assumed that the two glucanases studied here are responsible for cell wall lysis, it now appears that the culture fluid contains in addition a specific lytic enzyme which is eliminated during the extensive purification process.  相似文献   

9.
Particulate enzyme preparations from Phaseolus aureus hypocotyls catalyze the formation of an alkali insoluble β, 1 → 4 linked [14C]-glucan using UDP-α-d [14C]-glucose as substrate. Particulate enzymes prepared from root tissue also catalyzed the production of β, 1 → 4 glucan. UDP-β-d-[14C]-glucose would not serve as a substrate for these enzymes. The presence or absence of β, 1 → 4 glucan synthetase activity was independent of tissue source, substrate concentration, or homogenization method.  相似文献   

10.
Xyloglucans, characteristic hemicellulosic polysaccharides of plant primary walls, have been isolated from Rosa glauca suspension-cultured cells. The cell wall material was fractionated by two sequences of extraction based on solubilization of the hemicelluloses in alkaline and organic solvent systems, respectively. In both cases, only a part (about 50%) of the total xyloglucan could be extracted, the rest remaining tightly associated with cellulose and necessitating the use of acid to be solubilized. Purification of xyloglucans was effected by formation of a gel in appropriate mixtures of dimethyl sulfoxide and water. Further fractionation could be achieved on a cellulose column eluted with chaotropic solvents. This demonstrated the heterogeneity of xyloglucans in the primary cell walls. Analytical data show that all fractions are constituted with the same sugars: l-arabinose, l-fucose, d-galactose, d-xylose, and d-glucose, but their relative proportions differ, particularly the ratio of glucose to xylose which varies from 1.2 to 2 within the different xyloglucans. The structure of these hemicelluloses was established by methylation analysis and shown to consist of a (1 → 4)-linked glucan backbone which carries substituents on the O-6 of glucose. Here again, the multiple forms of xyloglucans was suggested by the various patterns of substitutions found on the different fractions. The configuration of the linkages were established by 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and shown to be β for the glucan backbone, α for the xylosyl and fucosyl substituents, and β for the galactosyl substituents. These configurations agree with the specific rotation of the xyloglucan.  相似文献   

11.
Hoson T  Nevins DJ 《Plant physiology》1989,90(4):1353-1358
Antiserum was raised against the Avena sativa L. caryopsis β-d-glucan fraction with an average molecular weight of 1.5 × 104. Polyclonal antibodies recovered from the serum after Protein A-Sepharose column chromatography precipitated when cross-reacted with high molecular weight (1→3), (1→4)-β-d-glucans. These antibodies were effective in suppression of cell wall autohydrolytic reactions and auxin-induced decreases in noncellulosic glucose content of the cell wall of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles. The results indicate antibody-mediated interference with in situ β-d-glucan degradation. The antibodies at a concentration of 200 micrograms per milliliter also suppress auxin-induced elongation by about 40% and cell wall loosening (measured by the minimum stress-relaxation time of the segments) of Zea coleoptiles. The suppression of elongation by antibodies was imposed without a lag period. Auxin-induced elongation, cell wall loosening, and chemical changes in the cell walls were near the levels of control tissues when segments were subjected to antibody preparation precipitated by a pretreatment with Avena caryopsis β-d-glucans. These results support the idea that the degradation of (1→3), (1→4)-β-d-glucans by cell wall enzymes is associated with the cell wall loosening responsible for auxin-induced elongation.  相似文献   

12.
Lactobacillus reuteri strain 121 produces a unique, highly branched, soluble glucan in which the majority of the linkages are of the α-(1→4) glucosidic type. The glucan also contains α-(1→6)-linked glucosyl units and 4,6-disubstituted α-glucosyl units at the branching points. Using degenerate primers, based on the amino acid sequences of conserved regions from known glucosyltransferase (gtf) genes from lactic acid bacteria, the L. reuteri strain 121 glucosyltransferase gene (gtfA) was isolated. The gtfA open reading frame (ORF) was 5,343 bp, and it encodes a protein of 1,781 amino acids with a deduced Mr of 198,637. The deduced amino acid sequence of GTFA revealed clear similarities with other glucosyltransferases. GTFA has a relatively large variable N-terminal domain (702 amino acids) with five unique repeats and a relatively short C-terminal domain (267 amino acids). The gtfA gene was expressed in Escherichia coli, yielding an active GTFA enzyme. With respect to binding type and size distribution, the recombinant GTFA enzyme and the L. reuteri strain 121 culture supernatants synthesized identical glucan polymers. Furthermore, the deduced amino acid sequence of the gtfA ORF and the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the glucosyltransferase isolated from culture supernatants of L. reuteri strain 121 were the same. GTFA is thus responsible for the synthesis of the unique glucan polymer in L. reuteri strain 121. This is the first report on the molecular characterization of a glucosyltransferase from a Lactobacillus strain.  相似文献   

13.
The complement system is part of our first line of defense against invading pathogens. The strategies used by Enterococcus faecalis to evade recognition by human complement are incompletely understood. In this study, we identified an insertional mutant of the wall teichoic acid (WTA) synthesis gene tagB in E. faecalis V583 that exhibited an increased susceptibility to complement-mediated killing by neutrophils. Further analysis revealed that increased killing of the mutant was due to a higher rate of phagocytosis by neutrophils, which correlated with higher C3b deposition on the bacterial surface. Our studies indicated that complement activation via the lectin pathway was much stronger on the tagB mutant compared with wild type. In concordance, we found an increased binding of the key lectin pathway components mannose-binding lectin and mannose-binding lectin-associated serine protease-2 (MASP-2) on the mutant. To understand the mechanism of lectin pathway inhibition by E. faecalis, we purified and characterized cell wall carbohydrates of E. faecalis wild type and V583ΔtagB. NMR analysis revealed that the mutant strain lacked two WTAs with a repeating unit of →6)[α-l-Rhap-(1→3)]β-d-GalpNAc-(1→5)-Rbo-1-P and →6) β-d-Glcp-(1→3) [α-d-Glcp-(1→4)]-β-d-GalpNAc-(1→5)-Rbo-1-P→, respectively (Rbo, ribitol). In addition, compositional changes in the enterococcal rhamnopolysaccharide were noticed. Our study indicates that in E. faecalis, modification of peptidoglycan by secondary cell wall polymers is critical to evade recognition by the complement system.  相似文献   

14.
The cell wall of Candida albicans is composed largely of polysaccharides. Here we focus on β-glucan, an immunogenic cell-wall polysaccharide whose surface exposure is often restricted, or “masked,” from immune recognition by Dectin-1 on dendritic cells (DCs) and other innate immune cells. Previous research suggested that the physical presentation geometry of β-glucan might determine whether it can be recognized by Dectin-1. We used direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy to explore the fine structure of β-glucan exposed on C. albicans cell walls before and after treatment with the antimycotic drug caspofungin, which alters glucan exposure. Most surface-accessible glucan on C. albicans yeast and hyphae is limited to isolated Dectin-1–binding sites. Caspofungin-induced unmasking caused approximately fourfold to sevenfold increase in total glucan exposure, accompanied by increased phagocytosis efficiency of DCs for unmasked yeasts. Nanoscopic imaging of caspofungin-unmasked C. albicans cell walls revealed that the increase in glucan exposure is due to increased density of glucan exposures and increased multiglucan exposure sizes. These findings reveal that glucan exhibits significant nanostructure, which is a previously unknown physical component of the host–Candida interaction that might change during antifungal chemotherapy and affect innate immune activation.  相似文献   

15.
Auxin-enhanced glucan autohydrolysis in maize coleoptile cell walls   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Cell walls isolated from auxin-pretreated maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptile segments were assayed to disclose evidence for the existence of enhanced autolysis. To improve the sensitivity of the measurements and to facilitate kinetic analysis, isolated cell walls were consolidated within a small column, and the autolysis rate was directly determined from the sugar content of the effluent. This protocol revealed that the maximum rate of autohydrolysis of walls prepared from segments occurs within the first 2 hours and a steady decline commences almost immediately. Walls from indoleacetic acid pretreated segments (0.5-4 hours) released sugar at a higher rate initially (110-125% of controls) and the enhanced rate of autolysis continued for 6 to 8 hours, but then it became equivalent to that of the controls. Pretreatment of the segments at acidic pH had no effect on the measurable rates of autolysis. The (1→3), (1→4)-β-d-glucan content of the walls and the extractable glucanase activities support the hypothesis that temporal enhancement of autohydrolysis is a function of auxin on enzyme activity. The progressive decline in autolysis during prolonged incubations is consistent with the decrease in the quantity of the β-d-glucan in the wall. The relationship between glucan content and autolysis rate is supported by the observation that while glucose pretreatment of segments had only a small effect on initial autolysis rates, the presence of the sugar during pretreatment served to extend the interval over which higher rates of autolysis could be sustained. The results demonstrate that autolysis is related to auxin-induced wall metabolism in maize coleoptiles.  相似文献   

16.
Gibberellic acid (GA) stimulated both the elongation of Avena sativa stem segments and increased synthesis of cell wall material. The effects of GA on glucose metabolism, as related to cell wall synthesis, have been investigated in order to find specific events regulated by GA. GA caused a decline in the levels of glucose, glucose 6-phosphate, and fructose 6-phosphate if exogenous sugar was not supplied to the segments, whereas the hormone caused no change in the levels of glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, UDP-glucose, or the adenylate energy charge if the segments were incubated in 0.1 m glucose. No GA-induced change could be demonstrated in the activities of hexokinase, phosphoglucomutase, UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, or polysaccharide synthetases using UDP-glucose, UDP-galactose, UDP-xylose, and UDP-arabinose as substrates. GA stimulated the activity of GDP-glucose-dependent β-glucan synthetase by 2- to 4-fold over the control. When glucan synthetase was assayed using UDP-glucose as substrate, only β-1,3-linked glucan was synthesized in vitro, whereas with GDP-glucose, only β-1,4-linked glucan was synthesized. These results suggest that one part of the mechanism by which GA stimulates cell wall synthesis concurrently with elongation in Avena stem segments may be through a stimulation of cell wall polysaccharide synthetase activity.  相似文献   

17.
Enrico Cabib 《Eukaryotic cell》2009,8(11):1626-1636
Previous work, using solubilization of yeast cell walls by carboxymethylation, before or after digestion with β(1-3)- or β(1-6)glucanase, followed by size chromatography, showed that the transglycosylases Crh1p and Crh2p/Utr2p were redundantly required for the attachment of chitin to β(1-6)glucan. With this technique, crh1Δ crh2Δ mutants still appeared to contain a substantial percentage of chitin linked to β(1-3)glucan. Two novel procedures have now been developed for the analysis of polysaccharide cross-links in the cell wall. One is based on the affinity of curdlan, a β(1-3)glucan, for β(1-3)glucan chains in carboxymethylated cell walls. The other consists of in situ deacetylation of cell wall chitin, generating chitosan, which can be extracted with acetic acid, either directly (free chitosan) or after digestion with different glucanases (bound chitosan). Both methodologies indicated that all of the chitin in crh1Δ crh2Δ strains is free. Reexamination of the previously used procedure revealed that the β(1-3)glucanase preparation used (zymolyase) is contaminated with a small amount of endochitinase, which caused erroneous results with the double mutant. After removing the chitinase from the zymolyase, all three procedures gave coincident results. Therefore, Crh1p and Crh2p catalyze the transfer of chitin to both β(1-3)- and β(1-6)glucan, and the biosynthetic mechanism for all chitin cross-links in the cell wall has been established.The fungal cell wall protects the cell against internal turgor pressure and external mechanical injury. To fulfill these functions, it must be endowed with a resilient structure. Presumably, the cell wall strength is largely due to the cross-links that bind together its components, mainly polysaccharides, giving rise to a tightly knit mesh (6, 11-13). Interestingly, the cross-links must be created outside the plasma membrane, because most of the polysaccharides are extruded as they are synthesized at the membrane; therefore, they do not exist inside the cell. This posits a thermodynamic problem, because there are no obvious sources of energy in the periplasmic space. About 20 years ago we proposed that the free energy may come from existing bonds in the polysaccharide chains and that the new cross-links may be originated by transglycosylation, thus creating a new linkage for each one that is broken (5).Ascertaining the mechanism of cross-link formation seemed a worthwhile endeavor, both because of the theoretical implications and because the cell wall is a proven target for antifungal compounds; therefore, more knowledge about its synthesis can be of practical interest. For this type of investigation to proceed, it was necessary to devise some method for the quantitative analysis of cell wall cross-links. We developed such a procedure for the evaluation of the proportion of cell wall chitin that is free or bound to β(1-3)- or β(1-6)glucan (4). In this methodology, chitin was specifically labeled in vivo with [14C]glucosamine; cell walls were isolated, and their proteins were eliminated by alkali treatment. The insoluble residue was solubilized by carboxymethylation and analyzed by size fractionation chromatography. By treating the cell walls with different glucanases before carboxymethylation and comparing the chromatographic profiles, we were able to determine the amount of chitin bound to the different glucans, as well as the fraction that was free (4). Armed with this procedure, we could now analyze the cell wall of different mutants that appeared to be candidates for cross-links defects. In this way we found that the two putative transglycosylases Crh1p and Crh2p were redundantly required for the formation of the chitin-β(1-6)glucan linkage. A double mutant crh1Δ crh2Δ had no chitin attached to β(1-6)glucan, although it still contained apparently normal amounts of chitin-β(1-3)glucan complex (7). Further work supported the notion that Crh1p and Crh2p function as transglycosylases, transferring portions of chitin chains to glucan (8). This confirmed our earlier hypothesis.With the initial intention of finding easier and faster methods, I devised two novel procedures for cell wall analysis. One is based on the affinity between β(1-3)glucan chains, the other on the conversion of chitin in situ into its deacetylated product, chitosan, followed by extraction of the chitosan with acetic acid before or after treatment with specific glucanases. With a wild-type strain, both procedures gave similar results to those of the carboxymethylation-chromatography technique. However, in the double mutant crh1Δ crh2Δ all of the chitin appeared to be free with both new methods. Further investigation showed that the older procedure led to erroneous results for the double mutant, because of the presence of a small amount of chitinase in the β(1-3)glucanase preparation used. After reconciling the results, I conclude that Crh1p and Crh2p are necessary for the formation of cross-links between chitin and either β(1-6) or β(1-3)glucan.  相似文献   

18.
Highly conserved glycoside hydrolase family 70 glucansucrases are able to catalyze the synthesis of α-glucans with different structure from sucrose. The structural determinants of glucansucrase specificity have remained unclear. Residue Leu940 in domain B of GTF180, the glucansucrase of the probiotic bacterium Lactobacillus reuteri 180, was shown to vary in different glucansucrases and is close to the +1 glucosyl unit in the crystal structure of GTF180-ΔN in complex with maltose. Herein, we show that mutations in Leu940 of wild-type GTF180-ΔN all caused an increased percentage of (α1→6) linkages and a decreased percentage of (α1→3) linkages in the products. α-Glucans with potential different physicochemical properties (containing 67–100% of (α1→6) linkages) were produced by GTF180 and its Leu940 mutants. Mutant L940W was unable to form (α1→3) linkages and synthesized a smaller and linear glucan polysaccharide with only (α1→6) linkages. Docking studies revealed that the introduction of the large aromatic amino acid residue tryptophan at position 940 partially blocked the binding groove, preventing the isomalto-oligosaccharide acceptor to bind in an favorable orientation for the formation of (α1→3) linkages. Our data showed that the reaction specificity of GTF180 mutant was shifted either to increased polysaccharide synthesis (L940A, L940S, L940E, and L940F) or increased oligosaccharide synthesis (L940W). The L940W mutant is capable of producing a large amount of isomalto-oligosaccharides using released glucose from sucrose as acceptors. Thus, residue Leu940 in domain B is crucial for linkage and reaction specificity of GTF180. This study provides clear and novel insights into the structure-function relationships of glucansucrase enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Hohl M  Hong YN  Schopfer P 《Plant physiology》1991,95(4):1012-1018
The release of soluble carbohydrates from isolated cell wall of maize (Zea mays L.) was investigated in the range of pH 1 to 8.5. The pH profile demonstrated two peaks, a broad peak at pH 6 due to enzymatic breakdown of β-glucan to monosaccharides (wall autolysis) and a sharp peak at pH 2.5 due to acid-mediated, nonenzymatic liberation of macromolecular β-glucan from the wall. The pH dependence of acid-induced growth and cell-wall extensibility of coleoptile segments closely agrees with the pH dependence of acid-mediated β-glucan solubilization in the isolated wall. However, there is no evidence that enzymatic or nonenzymatic β-glucan solubilization is involved in the mechanism of auxin-mediated growth.  相似文献   

20.
Cells of proso millet (Panicum miliaceum L. cv Abarr) in liquid culture and leaves of maize seedlings (Zea mays L. cv LH51 × LH1131) readily incorporated d-[U-14C]glucose and l-[U-14C]arabinose into soluble and cell wall polymers. Radioactivity from arabinose accumulated selectively in polymers containing arabinose or xylose because a salvage pathway and C-4 epimerase yield both nucleotide-pentoses. On the other hand, radioactivity from glucose was found in all sugars and polymers. Pulse-chase experiments with proso millet cells in liquid culture demonstrated turnover of buffer soluble polymers within minutes and accumulation of radioactive polymers in the cell wall. In leaves of maize seedlings, radioactive polymers accumulated quickly and peaked 30 hours after the pulse then decreased slowly for the remaining time course. During further growth of the seedlings, radioactive polymers became more tenaciously bound in the cell wall. Sugars were constantly recycled from turnover of polysaccharides of the cell wall. Arabinose, hydrolyzed from glucuronoarabinoxylans, and glucose, hydrolyzed from mixed-linkage (1→3, 1→4)β-d-glucans, constituted most of the sugar participating in turnover. Arabinogalactans were a large portion of the buffer soluble (cytoplasmic) polymers of both proso millet cells and maize seedlings, and these polymers also exhibited turnover. Our results indicate that the primary cell wall is not simply a sink for various polysaccharide components, but rather a dynamic compartment exhibiting long-term reorganization by turnover and alteration of specific polymers during development.  相似文献   

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