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1.
At 'low' ionic strength, acid phosphatase bound to plant cell walls exhibits an apparent negative co-operativity, whereas it displays classic Michaelis-Menten kinetics in free solution. Conversely, at 'high' ionic strength, the bound enzyme and the soluble enzyme behave identically. This apparent negative co-operativity is explained by the existence of an electrostatic partition of the charged substrate by the fixed negative charges of the cell wall. Raising the ionic strength suppresses these electrostatic repulsion effects. Calcium may be removed from the cell walls by acid treatment and the acid phosphatase is apparently strongly inhibited. This inhibition occurs together with an increased apparent negative co-operativity of the enzyme. Incubating cell wall fragments previously depleted of calcium with CaCl2 restores the initial behaviour of the enzyme. Calcium, which tightly binds to cell wall pectic compounds, has by itself no effect on the enzyme in free solution. It affects the net charge of the cell wall and therefore the amplitude of electrostatic repulsion effects. Non-linear least-square fitting methods make it possible to estimate the density of fixed negative charges as well as the electrostatic partition coefficient, for both the 'native' and 'calcium-deprived' cell wall fragments. It may be shown directly that calcium loading and unloading in the cell wall controls the electrostatic effects, by monitoring proton extrusion from cell wall fragments upon raising the ionic strength. Proton outflux in the bulk phase is considerably enhanced upon removal of calcium from the cell walls. The main conclusion is that loading and unloading of calcium during cell elongation and division may regulate the activity of cell wall enzymes.  相似文献   

2.
Location of Sulfate-binding Protein in Salmonella typhimurium   总被引:17,自引:6,他引:11  
A method is described for location of proteins in bacteria. It depends upon two techniques. One technique is the inactivation of the protein by a reagent which is incapable of penetrating the bacterial membrane (permeability barrier). Proteins inside this membrane cannot be inactivated unless the cells are disrupted; proteins on or outside the membrane can be inactivated. The second technique depends upon inactivation of the protein by specific antibody. Antibody should not penetrate the external bacterial wall, and therefore should only inactivate proteins that are on the wall surface. Thus, proteins can be localized inside the membrane, in the wall-membrane area, or outside the wall. One reagent developed for use with the first technique is diazo-7-amino-1,3-naphthalene-disulfonate. It inactivated beta-galactoside transport, but not beta-galactosidase of intact Escherichia coli. Similarly, it inactivated sulfate binding and transport but not uridine phosphorylase activity of Salmonella typhimurium. This indicates that the sulfate-binding protein is on or outside the cell membrane, and that uridine phosphorylase is inside the cell. The organic mercurial compounds used also showed that the sensitive parts of the sulfate and alpha-methylglucoside transport systems are less reactive than the sensitive part of the beta-galactoside system. Antibody to the sulfate-binding protein inactivated the purified protein but did not inactivate this protein when intact bacteria were employed. Thus, it appears that the sulfate-binding protein does not protrude outside the cell wall. The conclusion that the binding protein is located in the wall-membrane region is supported by its release upon spheroplast formation or osmotic shock, and also by its ability to combine with sulfate in bacteria which cannot transport sulfate into the cell.  相似文献   

3.
Plant cell walls provide form and mechanical strength to the living plant, but the relationship between their complex architecture and their remarkable ability to withstand external stress is not well understood. Primary cell walls are adapted to withstand tensile stresses while secondary cell walls also need to withstand compressive stresses. Therefore, while primary cell walls can with advantage be flexible and elastic, secondary cell walls must be rigid to avoid buckling under compressive loads. In addition, primary cell walls must be capable of growth and are subjected to cell separation forces at the cell corners. To understand how these stresses are resisted by cell walls, it will be necessary to find out how the walls deform internally under load, and how rigid are specific constituents of each type of cell wall. The most promising spectroscopic techniques for this purpose are solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) and Raman microscopy. By NMR relaxation experiments, it is possible to probe thermal motion in each cell-wall component. Novel adaptations of FTIR and Raman spectroscopy promise to allow mechanical stress and strain upon specific polymers to be examined in situ within the cell wall.  相似文献   

4.
Cell wall polysaccharides: before and after autolysis of brewer’s yeast   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Brewer’s yeast is used in production of beer since millennia, and it is receiving increased attention because of its distinct fermentation ability and other biological properties. During fermentation, autolysis occurs naturally at the end of growth cycle of yeast. Yeast cell wall provides yeast with osmotic integrity and holds the cell shape upon the cell wall stresses. The cell wall of yeast consists of β-glucans, chitin, mannoproteins, and proteins that cross linked with glycans and a glycolipid anchor. The variation in composition and amount of cell wall polysaccharides during autolysis in response to cell wall stress, laying significant impacts on the autolysis ability of yeast, either benefiting or destroying the flavor of final products. On the other hand, polysaccharides from yeast cell wall show outstanding health effects and are recommended to be used in functional foods. This article reviews the influence of cell wall polysaccharides on yeast autolysis, covering cell wall structure changings during autolysis, and functions and possible applications of cell wall components derived from yeast autolysis.  相似文献   

5.
During secondary cell wall formation, developing xylem vessels deposit cellulose at specific sites on the plasma membrane. Bands of cortical microtubules mark these sites and are believed to somehow orientate the cellulose synthase complexes. We have used live cell imaging on intact roots of Arabidopsis to explore the relationship between the microtubules, actin and the cellulose synthase complex during secondary cell wall formation. The cellulose synthase complexes are seen to form bands beneath sites of secondary wall synthesis. We find that their maintenance at these sites is dependent upon underlying bundles of microtubules which localize the cellulose synthase complex (CSC) to the edges of developing cell wall thickenings. Thick actin cables run along the long axis of the cells. These cables are essential for the rapid trafficking of complex-containing organelles around the cell. The CSCs appear to be delivered directly to sites of secondary cell wall synthesis and it is likely that transverse actin may mark these sites.  相似文献   

6.
CALCIUM AND PLANT GROWTH   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Calcium as a plant nutrient is characterized by its relatively high content in the plant coupled with a requirement not much higher than that of a micro nutrient element and an exceedingly uneven occurrence in soils. The difficulties in defining its actions are accentuated by a weak biochemical activity. In ecological conditions the secondary consequences of variations in calcium content may be more striking than the direct ones. Electron-microscopical studies have revealed that calcium is required for formation and maintenance of lamellary systems in cell organellae, a fact which might suffice to explain its indispensability for meristematic growth. Calcium is required for cell elongation in both shoots and roots; the common experience that it inhibits shoot elongation is certainly due to calcium additions far above actual requirement. It must be assumed for a rational interpretation of cell elongation that the fundamental mechanism is the same in shoots and roots. The one action which can be ascribed with certainty to calcium is a stabilizing of the cell wall with an increase in rigidity, an effect which, with over-optimal supply, may lead to growth inhibitions. The function is, however, necessary for the normal organization of cell walls. Calcium has, on the contrary, no significant effect on the synthesis of cell wall compounds but appears to act on their proper incorporation into the cell wall. The growth-active calcium may be bound not only to pectins but also to proteins and nucleoproteids in or in close contact with the cell wall. The supposition that calcium interacts directly with auxin in the cell wall has not been verified and does not seem very probable. There are reasons to believe that the points of action of calcium and auxin in the cell wall differ, auxin inducing growth by wall loosening and calcium establishing new wall parts. For submerged organs it may be necessary to consider an indirect effect of calcium on growth by its regulation of cytoplasmic permeability and thus affecting the exudation of growth-active compounds. The ecological problem is to characterize calcifuges (acid soil plants) from calcicoles (base soil or calcareous soil plants). Growth inhibitions on acid soils depend upon poisoning by A13+ and Mn2+. Opinions differ as to what extent this can be antagonized by calcium. Lime-induced chlorosis in calcifuges depends upon iron deficiency or iron inactivation in the plant. No acceptable explanation is given, but it might be related to an interaction of calcium carbonate, phosphorus, and iron. A hypothesis that it is linked to formation of organic acids is not tenable in the given form. Plants react to the calcium ions in the concentrations found in soils. Calcifuges have a low calcium-optimum for growth and show growth inhibition at high concentrations. Calcicoles have a high optimum for growth. Calcifuges are resistant to aluminium poisoning. Attempts made to explain the differences in calcium uptake and generally in salt uptake are tentative only, and relevant data are lacking.  相似文献   

7.
Thompson DS 《Annals of botany》2008,101(2):203-211
BACKGROUND: The biomechanical behaviour of plant cells depends upon the material properties of their cell walls and, in many cases, it is necessary that these properties are quite specific. Additionally, physiological regulation may require that target cells responding to hormonal signals or environmental factors are able to modulate these characteristics. ARGUMENT: This paper uses a rheological analysis of creep of elongating sunflower (Helianthus annuus) sunflower hypocotyls to demonstrate that the mechanical behaviour of plant cell walls is complex and involves multiple layered processes that can be distinguished from one another by the time-scale over which they lead to a change in tissue dimensions, their sensitivity to pH and temperature, and their responses to changes in spatial arrangement of the cell wall brought about by treatment with high M(r) PEG. Furthermore, it appears possible to regulate individual rheological processes, with limited effect on others, in order to modulate growth without affecting tissue structural integrity. It is proposed that control of the water content of the cell wall and therefore the space between cell wall polymers may be one mechanism by which differential regulation of cell wall biomechanical properties is achieved. This hypothesis is supported by evidence showing that enzyme extracts from growing tissues can cause swelling in cell wall fragments in suspension. IMPLICATIONS: The physiological implications of this complexity are then considered for growing tissues, stomatal guard cells and abscission cells. It is noted that, in each circumstance, a different combination of mechanical properties is required and that differential regulation of properties affecting behaviour over different time-scales is often necessary.  相似文献   

8.
Cell-wall carbohydrates and their modification as a resource for biofuels   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3  
Plant cell walls represent the most abundant renewable resource on this planet. Despite their great abundance, only 2% of this resource is currently used by humans. Hence, research into the feasibility of using plant cell walls in the production of cost-effective biofuels is desirable. The main bottleneck for using wall materials is the recalcitrance of walls to efficient degradation into fermentable sugars. Manipulation of the wall polysaccharide biosynthetic machinery or addition of wall structure-altering agents should make it possible to tailor wall composition and architecture to enhance sugar yields upon wall digestion for biofuel fermentation. Study of the biosynthetic machinery and its regulation is still in its infancy and represents a major scientific and technical research challenge. Of course, any change in wall structure to accommodate cost-efficient biofuel production may have detrimental effects on plant growth and development due to the diverse roles of walls in the life of a plant. However, the diversity and abundance of wall structures present in the plant kingdom gives hope that this challenge can be met.  相似文献   

9.
The mechanical behavior of plant tissues and its dependency on tissue geometry and turgor pressure are analytically dealt with in terms of the theory of cellular solids. A cellular solid is any material whose matter is distributed in the form of beamlike struts or complete “cell” walls. Therefore, its relative density is less than one and typically less than 0.3. Relative density is the ratio of the density of the cellular solid to the density of its constitutive (“cell wall”) material. Relative density depends upon cell shape and the density of cell wall material. It largely influences the mechanical behavior of cellular solids. Additional important parameters to mechanical behavior are the elastic modulus of “cell walls” and the magnitude of internal “cell” pressure. Analyses indicate that two “stiffening” agents operate in natural cellular solids (plant tissues): 1) cell wall infrastructure and 2) the hydrostatic influence of the protoplasm within each cellular compartment. The elastic modulus measured from a living tissue sample is the consequence of both agents. Therefore, the mechanical properties of living tissues are dependent upon the magnitude of turgor pressure. High turgor pressure places cell walls into axial tension, reduces the magnitude of cell wall deformations under an applied stress, and hence increases the apparent elastic modulus of the tissue. In the absence of turgid protoplasts or in the case of dead tissues, the cell wall infrastructure will respond as a linear elastic, nonlinear elastic, or “densifying” material (under compression) dependent upon the magnitude of externally applied stress. Accordingly, it is proposed that no single tangent (elastic) modulus from a stress-strain curve of a plant tissue is sufficient to characterize the material properties of a sample. It is also suggested that when a modulus is calculated that it be referred to as the tissue composite modulus to distinguish it from the elastic modulus of a noncellular solid material.  相似文献   

10.
Viability, morphology, lysis, and cell wall hydrolase activity of Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris MG1363 and SK11 were determined after exposure to pressure. Both strains were completely inactivated at pressures of 400 to 800 MPa but unaffected at 100 and 200 MPa. At 300 MPa, the MG1363 and SK11 populations decreased by 7.3 and 2.5 log cycles, respectively. Transmission electron microscopy indicated that pressure caused intracellular and cell envelope damage. Pressure-treated MG1363 cell suspensions lysed more rapidly over time than did non-pressure-treated controls. Twenty-four hours after pressure treatment, the percent lysis ranged from 13.0 (0.1 MPa) to 43.3 (300 MPa). Analysis of the MG1363 supernatants by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) confirmed pressure-induced lysis. Pressure did not induce lysis or membrane permeability of SK11. Renaturing SDS-PAGE (zymogram analysis) revealed two hydrolytic bands from MG1363 cell extracts treated at all pressures (0.1 to 800 MPa). Measuring the reducing sugars released during enzymatic cell wall breakdown provided a quantitative, nondenaturing assay of cell wall hydrolase activity. Cells treated at 100 MPa released significantly more reducing sugar than other samples, including the non-pressure-treated control, indicating that pressure can activate cell wall hydrolase activity or increase cell wall accessibility to the enzyme. The cell suspensions treated at 200 and 300 MPa did not differ significantly from the control, whereas cells treated at pressures greater than 400 MPa displayed reduced cell wall hydrolase activity. These data suggest that high pressure can cause inactivation, physical damage, and lysis in L. lactis. Pressure-induced lysis is strain dependent and not solely dependent upon cell wall hydrolase activity.  相似文献   

11.
The plant cell wall has a somewhat paradoxical mechanical role in the plant: it must be strong enough to resist the high turgor of the cell contents, but at the right moment it must yield to that pressure to allow cell growth. The control of the cell wall's mechanical properties underlies its ability to regulate growth correctly. Recently, we have reported on changes in cell wall elasticity associated with organ formation at the shoot apical meristem in Arabidopsis thaliana. These changes in cell wall elasticity were strongly correlated with changes in pectin matrix chemistry, and we have previously shown that changes in pectin chemistry can dramatically effect organ formation. These findings point to a important role of the cell wall pectin matrix in cell growth control of higher plants. In this addendum we will discuss the biological significance of these new observations, and will place the scientific advances made possible through Atomic Force Microscopy-based nano-indentations in a relatable context with past experiments on cell wall mechanics.  相似文献   

12.
In a screen for cell wall defects in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we isolated a strain carrying a mutation in the Cdc28-activating kinase CAK1. The cak1P212S mutant cells exhibit multiple, elongated and branched buds, beta(1,3)glucan-poor regions of the cell periphery and lysed upon osmotic shock after treatment with the chitin synthase III inhibitor Nikkomycin Z. Ultrastructural examination of cak1P212S mutants revealed a thin, uneven cell wall and marked abnormalities in septum formation. In all of the above aspects, the cak1P212S mutants are similar to previously described cla4 mutants, suggesting that the cell wall defects are common to mutants with hyperpolarized growth. In cak1P212S mutants, chitin accumulates all over the surface of the cells and glucan synthase activity is located preferentially to the tips of elongated buds. We conclude that the cell wall weakness in cak1P212S mutants is caused by hyperpolarized secretion of glucan synthase and lack of reinforcement of the lateral cell walls. Showing that the defect depends at least in part on Cdc28, the cak1P212S hyperpolarized growth phenotype can be suppressed by a Cak1-independent Cdc28-allele. The results underline the importance of a minor cell wall component, the chitin of lateral walls, for the integrity of the cell in a stress situation.  相似文献   

13.
Hoffmann XK  Beck CF 《Plant physiology》2005,139(2):999-1014
The first step in sexual differentiation of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is the formation of gametes. Three genes, GAS28, GAS30, and GAS31, encoding Hyp-rich glycoproteins that presumably are cell wall constituents, are expressed in the late phase of gametogenesis. These genes, in addition, are activated by zygote formation and cell wall removal and by the application of osmotic stress. The induction by zygote formation could be traced to cell wall shedding prior to gamete fusion since it was seen in mutants defective in cell fusion. However, it was absent in mutants defective in the initial steps of mating, i.e. in flagellar agglutination and in accumulation of adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate in response to this agglutination. Induction of the three GAS genes was also observed when cultures were exposed to hypoosmotic or hyperosmotic stress. To address the question whether the induction seen upon cell wall removal from both gametes and vegetative cells was elicited by osmotic stress, cell wall removal was performed under isosmotic conditions. Also under such conditions an activation of the genes was observed, suggesting that the signaling pathway(s) is (are) activated by wall removal itself.  相似文献   

14.
Uptake of Al across the plasma membrane of plant cells   总被引:7,自引:1,他引:6  
Rengel  Zdenko  Reid  Robert J. 《Plant and Soil》1997,192(1):31-35
Measurements of intracellular, cytosolic Al are plagued with technical difficulties. An accurate quantification of Al uptake into the cytosol relies on the effectiveness of the methods that desorb Al bound to the cell wall. However, published desorption methods are not completely effective in removing cell wall Al. Using giant algal cells of Chara corallina, where a physical separation of the cell wall and the cytosol can be achieved surgically, it was shown that up to 99.99% of the total cellular Al accumulates in the cell wall. Even when 95% of total Al present in intact cells was desorbed, still over 20 times more Al was left in the cell wall than in the cytosol. Therefore, without physical separation of the cell wall and the cytosol, minute amounts of cytosolic Al need to be measured in the considerably larger background of the cell wall Al. Consequently, up to several orders of magnitude lower uptake rates of Al were measured across the plasma membrane of intact Chara cells in comparison to currently available values on higher plant cells (Triticum aestivum, t Glycine max, Phaseolus vulgaris), where at least some of the cell wall Al was attributed to the intracellular, cytosolic Al. Uptake of Al across the plasma membrane of Chara cells occurs without a delay at a very low rate that is directly proportional to Al concentration in the uptake medium. Moreover, residual Al left in the cell wall after desorption can be taken up into the cytosol of Chara cells during subsequent growth in the artificial pond water. For measuring Al uptake into roots of higher plants, the Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry is the best available technique because it appears to overestimate the cytosolic Al to the lower extent than any other currently used analytical method for determination of Al.  相似文献   

15.
Corsican pine (Pinus nigra) sapwood was chemically modified with acetic, or hexanoic anhydride to a variety of weight percentage gains. The cell wall microporosity of the wood before and after chemical modification was determined using the technique of solute exclusion. The results showed that the cell wall microporosity decreased as the level of substitution increased, but the cell wall remained accessible at high levels of substitution. Values of the fibre saturation point (FSP) calculated from solute exclusion data ranged from c. 40% (for unmodified wood) to c. 20% at approx. 25% weight percentage gain, but were dependent to some degree upon the calculation method. Evidence is presented suggesting that the reduction in FSP may be attributable to bulking of the cell wall by bonded acyl adduct. It is concluded that the level of hydroxyl substitution in the cell wall is not the primary mechanism for giving decay protection in anhydride-modified wood.  相似文献   

16.
Infection of one leaf of cucumber (Cucumis sativa) plants can render other leaves resistant to various pathogens. This so-called systemic acquired resistance (SAR) can be functionally mimicked by certain chemicals. All these treatments enhanced expression of a gene encoding a novel proline-rich protein (PRP1) which has C-terminal repetitive sequences containing an unusually high amount of lysine and arginine residues. Antibodies raised against a synthetic peptide derived from four of the repetitive sequences cross-reacted mainly with a cell wall polypeptide of an apparent MW of 8 kDa. The protein accumulated upon SAR induction, though it does not appear to take part in oxidative protein cross-linking, at least in the hypocotyl tissue. The synthetic peptide derived from the repetitive sequences was able to polymerize orthosilicic acid to insoluble silica, a property not resulting directly from the primary protein sequence, but rather from the high positive charge density. Our results suggest that during induction of SAR, the synthesis of a strongly cationic PRP prepares the cell walls for enhanced silica deposition which is known to participate in cell wall reinforcement, localized at the site of attempted penetration of fungi into epidermal cells. Constitutive accumulation of related PRPs may function in silica deposition during certain developmental stages, a process important for various physiological functions of green plants.  相似文献   

17.
Viability, morphology, lysis, and cell wall hydrolase activity of Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris MG1363 and SK11 were determined after exposure to pressure. Both strains were completely inactivated at pressures of 400 to 800 MPa but unaffected at 100 and 200 MPa. At 300 MPa, the MG1363 and SK11 populations decreased by 7.3 and 2.5 log cycles, respectively. Transmission electron microscopy indicated that pressure caused intracellular and cell envelope damage. Pressure-treated MG1363 cell suspensions lysed more rapidly over time than did non-pressure-treated controls. Twenty-four hours after pressure treatment, the percent lysis ranged from 13.0 (0.1 MPa) to 43.3 (300 MPa). Analysis of the MG1363 supernatants by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) confirmed pressure-induced lysis. Pressure did not induce lysis or membrane permeability of SK11. Renaturing SDS-PAGE (zymogram analysis) revealed two hydrolytic bands from MG1363 cell extracts treated at all pressures (0.1 to 800 MPa). Measuring the reducing sugars released during enzymatic cell wall breakdown provided a quantitative, nondenaturing assay of cell wall hydrolase activity. Cells treated at 100 MPa released significantly more reducing sugar than other samples, including the non-pressure-treated control, indicating that pressure can activate cell wall hydrolase activity or increase cell wall accessibility to the enzyme. The cell suspensions treated at 200 and 300 MPa did not differ significantly from the control, whereas cells treated at pressures greater than 400 MPa displayed reduced cell wall hydrolase activity. These data suggest that high pressure can cause inactivation, physical damage, and lysis in L. lactis. Pressure-induced lysis is strain dependent and not solely dependent upon cell wall hydrolase activity.  相似文献   

18.
T cell lines (B13, B19) were isolated from the lymph nodes of Lewis rats 12 days after an arthritogenic injection of cell wall fragments of Eubacterium aerofaciens (ECW), a major resident of the human intestinal flora. These cell wall fragments consist of peptidoglycan polysaccharide complexes (PPC). The cell lines that bear the helper phenotype were arthritogenic in knee or ankle joints upon intravenous injection into irradiated Lewis recipients. B13 was, however, not arthritogenic in irradiated F344 recipients that are largely RT1 identical. The arthritis induced in the knee joints of the irradiated Lewis rats was clearly shown by a 99mtechnetium-pertechnetate scanning technique and was confirmed histologically. In vitro the cell lines showed a proliferative response after stimulation with syngeneic spleen cells alone. The proliferation was significantly higher when bacterial PPC, isolated in soluble form from normal feces or ileostomy fluid were added. Recognition by B13 appeared to be MHC class II restricted. These results show that autoreactive T cell lines can be isolated from rats after injection of bacterial cell wall antigens and that these cell lines can be arthritogenic. This suggests a role for autoreactive T cells in the induction of bacterial cell wall arthritis and might give a clue for the arthritogenic properties of the normal human intestinal flora.  相似文献   

19.
Most plasmodesmata are formed across the cell plate at cytokinesis. Most of them persist until the cell is mature. Depending upon the pattern of elongation of the cell in differentiation, the frequency of plasmodesmata per unit area will suffer dilution to a greater or lesser extent. This dilution effect is now well understood and results commonly in high concentrations of plasmodesmata across transverse walls which have undergone little elongation and low concentrations on the longitudinal walls.Apart from their obvious role in cell to cell communication it is now believed that some plasmodesmata may offer preferential sites from which endogenous wall lytic enzymes may attack some or all of the constituent polymers of the surrounding wall. The effects of the asymmetrical distribution of large numbers of plasmodesmata, leading to the asymmetrical penetration of the wall by lytic enzymes are described and a hypothesis concerning the later stages of cell differentiation is constructed. In addition the late stage differentiation of individual plasmodesmata based on the same proposed lytic action, is described and re-interpreted.  相似文献   

20.
Depending upon growth temperature, Candida albicans can exhibit two different morphologies, a budding yeast or a mycelium. By studying the distribution of concanavalin A-ferritin particles on the cell wall surface during bud and germ tube formation, we have elucidated the way cell wall extension occurs. Both processes initially require the localized lysis of the wall in order to allow the incorporation of the newly synthesized material. Later on, the cell wall behaves as an elastic structure, allowing extension by an intosusception process and, as a consequence, cell growth.Abbreviation Con A concanavalin A  相似文献   

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