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Characteristics of a Galactose-adapted Sugarcane Cell Line Grown in Suspension Culture
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1978
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Mm GalactoseGlycosylationBiochemistryGlycobiologyBiotechnologyGalactose-adapted CellsPolysaccharideAgricultural BiotechnologySuspension CultureMedicineCell BiologyHemicelluloseCarbohydrate-protein InteractionCell WallFree Galactose
Although d-galactose is normally toxic to sugarcane (Saccharum sp.) cells, a cell line that grows on 100 mm galactose has been propagated. Nonadapted cells in a medium containing galactose instead of sucrose accumulate UDP-galactose; these cells also have much lower UDP-galactose 4-epimerase (EC 5.1.3.2) activity than do adapted cells. This enzyme may determine whether or not galactose will cause toxicity symptoms to develop. The growth rate of galactose-adapted cells is similar to most cell lines on several other carbohydrates. The galactose-adapted cells are also similar to sucrose stock cells in cell wall composition and sugar phosphate concentrations, but, like the nonadapted cells, accumulate free galactose.