Fucosyltransferase and the Biosynthesis of Storage and Structural Xyloglucan in Developing Nasturtium Fruits
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 118 (3) , 885-894
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.118.3.885
Abstract
Young, developing fruits of nasturtium (Tropaeolum majus L.) accumulate large deposits of nonfucosylated xyloglucan (XG) in periplasmic spaces of cotyledon cells. This "storage" XG can be fucosylated by a nasturtium transferase in vitro, but this does not happen in vivo, even as a transitory signal for secretion. The only XG that is clearly fucosylated in these fruits is the structural fraction (approximately 1% total) that is bound to cellulose in growing primary walls. The two fucosylated subunits that are formed in vitro are identical to those found in structural XG in vivo. The yield of XG-fucosyltransferase activity from membrane fractions is highest per unit fresh weight in the youngest fruits, especially in dissected cotyledons, but declines when storage XG is forming. A block appears to develop in the secretory machinery of young cotyledon cells between sites that galactosylate and those that fucosylate nascent XG. After extensive galactosylation, XG traffic is diverted to the periplasm without fucosylation. The primary walls buried beneath accretions of storage XG eventually swell and lose cohesion, probably because they continue to extend without incorporating components such as fucosylated XG that are needed to maintain wall integrity.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Xyloglucan sidechains modulate binding to cellulose during in vitro binding assays as predicted by conformational dynamics simulationsThe Plant Journal, 1997
- Degradation of apple fruit xyloglucan by endoglucanaseCarbohydrate Polymers, 1996
- Altered Growth and Cell Walls in a Fucose-Deficient Mutant of ArabidopsisScience, 1993
- Functional Compartmentation of the Golgi Apparatus of Plant CellsPlant Physiology, 1992
- Kinetics of Integration of Xyloglucan into the Walls of Suspension-Cultured Rose CellsJournal of Experimental Botany, 1992
- Simulations of the static and dynamic molecular conformations of xyloglucan. The role of the fucosylated sidechain in surface‐specific sidechain foldingThe Plant Journal, 1991
- Simulations of the static and dynamic molecular conformations of xyloglucan. The role of the fucosylated sidechain in surface-specific sidechain folding.The Plant Journal, 1991
- Xyloglucan oligosaccharide α-l-fucosidase activity from growing pea stems and germinating nasturtium seedsPhytochemistry, 1991
- Xyloglucans in the Primary Cell WallAnnual Review of Plant Biology, 1989
- Pea Xyloglucan and CellulosePlant Physiology, 1984