BLBS102-c12 BLBS102-Simpson March 21, 2012 13:11 Trim: 276mm X 219mm Printer Name: Yet to Come
234 Part 2: Biotechnology and Enzymology
O
OH
OH
HO
HO
HO
O O
O
O
HO HO C
OH
OH OH OH
OH
OH
OH O C OH
OH OH
O O C
O
O
OH
OH
O C
O
O
O
O
O
O
HOO C O C
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
O O
O
C
O HO
HO
HO
H 3 CO
H 3 CO
OCH 3
HO HO HO HO
HO
OH
Ca2+ Ca2+ Ca2+ Ca2+
OH
C
C C
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O O O O O O O
C
C
C
O
O O
HO HO
HO
HO HO
HO HO O
C OH
O
O
O O C OH
O
O
O
O O
O
O
CO
O
CO
O
CO
O
CO
O
O
O
O
C OCH 3
C
O
O
C OCH 3
O
H 3 CO
O
O
(A)
Figure 12.2.(A) Structure of homogalacturonan showing calcium ion associations. (Continued)
constituent of the cell wall (about 10% of pectin) consisting of
an HGA backbone that exhibits a complex and highly conserved
substitution pattern with many diverse sugars, linked together
with more than 20 different linkages. RGII often is found in
the wall as dimers cross-linked via borate-diol esters at the
apiose residues (Ishii et al. 1999). Another, less-abundant
pectic side chain is XGA, which is composed of a galacturonan
backbone substituted atO-3 with xylosyl side units (Willats
et al. 2004). Pectins are covalently interlinked, in part via
diferulic acid, and further cross-linked to cellulose, matrix
glycans, and other cell wall polymers (Thompson and Fry
2000, Zykwinska et al. 2005, Coenen et al. 2007). The relative
abundance and distribution of these polymers in the primary
cell wall is not constant. Variation in structure occurs within
cell types and plant species, even within the cell wall of a
single cell (Knox 2008, Jarvis 2011).
Fractionation of Pectic Substances
Methods for analyzing cell wall polymeric substances are based
on deconstruction of the cell wall by sequentially extracting
its components based on solubility. Tomato pericarp is boiled
in ethanol or extracted with tris-buffered phenol to inactivate
enzymes (Huber 1992), and cell wall polysaccharides are precip-
itated with ethanol. Alcohol-insoluble solids are sequentially ex-
tracted with 50 mMtrans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane-N,N,N′,N′-
tetraacetic acid (CDTA) and 50 mM sodium acetate buffer
(pH=6.5) to obtain the chelator-soluble (ionically bound)
pectin. Next, the pellet is extracted with 50 mM sodium carbon-
ate and 20 mM sodium borohydride, which results in breaking of
ester bonds, to obtain the carbonate-soluble (covalently bound
pectin via ester bonds) pectin. The remaining residue consists
primarily of cellulose and matrix glycans with only about 5%
remaining pectin. Extracts are dialyzed exhaustively against
water at 4◦C, and uronic acid (UA) content of dialyzed extracts
(extractable polyuronide) is determined using the method of
Blumenkrantz and Asboe-Hansen (1973), with GalA as a
standard.
BIOCHEMISTRY OF PECTIC ENZYMES
IN RIPENING TOMATO FRUIT
Ripening is a genetically coordinated process during which sev-
eral biochemical and physiological modifications of the fruit