Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2018649 Plant Science 2007 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

The effects of polygalacturonase (PG) on pectin dissolution and depolymerization were examined in cell walls from mature-green tomato fruit incubated in a conventional (C) buffer (30 mM sodium acetate, 150 mM NaCl, pH 4.5) and in buffers mimicking the apoplastic solution of mature-green (MG) and ripe fruit (R). Pectin dissolution from cell walls was much higher in C-buffer than in MG- or R-buffers. Buffered phenol inactivated cell walls incubated in C-buffer released 4.9 μg mg−1 pectin, which increased to 86.4 μg mg−1 when PG was added. In the R-buffer, PG increased the pectin dissolution from inactive cell walls from 0.5 to 18.3 μg mg−1. However, when the assay was conducted in buffer mimicking mature-green fruits, added PG did not increase pectin dissolution. The release of uronic acids from active cell walls in C-buffer and R-buffer was consistently lower than that from inactive walls due to the activity of pectinmethylesterase. Gel filtration profiles of CDTA-soluble pectins extracted from cell walls previously incubated in C-buffer or R-buffer with PG reveal that the enzyme is capable of hydrolyzing insoluble, ionically bound, pectins. These data support the idea that pH and mineral composition of the fruit apoplast provide a means for biochemical regulation of cell wall metabolism.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Plant Science
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