Publication | Open Access
Studies on Cellulose Synthesis by a Cell-free Oat Coleoptile Enzyme System: Inactivation by Airborne Oxidants
72
Citations
1
References
1967
Year
EngineeringGlycobiologyCellulose SynthesisCellulase DigestionPolysaccharideEnzymatic ModificationBiosynthesisBioenergeticsBiochemical EngineeringMetabolic EngineeringOzone TreatmentWood ComponentGlycosylationAirborne OxidantsBiochemistryNeutral PolymerBiomolecular EngineeringCellular EnzymologyBiotechnologyMedicineHemicellulose
Particulate cell wall polysaccharide synthetase from oat coleoptiles could use either guanosine diphosphate glucose or uridine diphosphate glucose; the latter was a much more effective glucose donor. The neutral polymer derived from uridine diphosphate glucose utilization yielded, after cellulase digestion, mostly cellobiose and to a lesser extent a substance tentatively identified as a mixed-linkage beta1,4 = beta1,3-trisaccharide; only cellobiose was found after guanosine diphosphate glucose utilization. The uridine diphosphate glucose utilizing system was inactivated by peroxyacetyl nitrate treatment of intact tissue and to a lesser extent by ozone treatment suggesting that this system is a possible site of interference with cellulose and non-cellulosic glucan biosynthesis in vivo. Direct treatment of the enzyme in vitro by peroxyacetyl nitrate, iodoacetamide or p-chloromercuribenzoate also inactivated the enzyme, indicating that the mechanism of inactivation possibly involves reaction with sulfhydryl groups.
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