Taxonomic group: plant / Streptophyta
(Phylum: Streptophyta)
Organ / tissue: hypocotyl,
cell wall
NCBI PubMed ID: 16667612Journal NLM ID: 0401224Publisher: American Society of Plant Biologists
Institutions: Department of Environmental Studies, Faculty of Integrated Arts and Sciences, Hiroshima University, Hiroshima 730, Japan
The elongation growth of stem segments is determined by the outer cell layers (epidermis and collenchyma). We measured the sugar composition and molecular weight distribution of pectin and hemicellulose fractions obtained from inner and outer tissues of squash (Cucurbita maxima Duch.) hypocotyls. In addition, we studied the changes in these parameters after a 9 hour period of incubation of the segments. The results show that outer tissues have higher molecular weight pectin and hemicellulose compared to inner tissues (2-3 times higher). Incubation results in a 13 to 25% decrease in the amount of pectin and hemicellulose in inner tissues and an increase of 11 to 32% in the outer tissues. This increase in the outer tissues is accompanied by a decrease in the molecular weight of some of the components. These results clearly show that cell wall metabolism during elongation growth differs markedly in inner and outer tissues, and that future studies on the effect of auxin need to take these differences into account.
Structure type: homopolymer
Trivial name: cellulose, β-(1,4)-glucan, cellulose, β-(1,4)-glucan
Compound class: EPS, O-polysaccharide, cell wall polysaccharide, glucan, polysaccharide
Contained glycoepitopes: IEDB_142488,IEDB_146664,IEDB_983931,SB_192
Comments, role: Parent molecule: cellulose
NCBI Taxonomy refs (TaxIDs): 3661Reference(s) to other database(s): GTC:G75830OM, GlycomeDB:
27885, CCSD:
50051, CBank-STR:4229
Show glycosyltransferases
There is only one chemically distinct structure: