Pectinase and Cellulase Enzyme Inhibitor from Sericea and Certain Other Plants
- 1 March 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in Botanical Gazette
- Vol. 126 (1) , 40-45
- https://doi.org/10.1086/336293
Abstract
A water-soluble substance isolated from the leaves of seven plant species is shown to inhibit the fungal hydrolytic enzymes, pectinase and cellulase. Three plants[long dash]sericea, muscadine grape, and persimmon[long dash]were found to be good sources of the inhibitor. Preparations of all three, isolated by the caffeine-complex method, were rated about equal in enzyme inhibition, and their chemical and physical characteristics were found to be essentially the same. When sericea was harvested in the field with a silage cutter, inhibitor activity was rapidly lost as compared to harvesting by cutting the whole stalk. Total tannin content did not appreciably change under any of the conditions of harvesting or dehydration. Grape-leaf and sericea-enzyme inhibitor are both of high molecular weight (14,000-20,000) and have certain chemical reactions that place them as condensed polymers of catechins or leucoantho-cyanidins.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Isolation and Description of the Pectinase‐Inhibiting Tannins of Grape LeavesJournal of Food Science, 1962
- Studies on the Tannin of Japanese Persimmon (Diospyros KakiL.)Agricultural and Biological Chemistry, 1962
- Probable Identity of the Pectinase Inhibitor in Grape LeavesJournal of Food Science, 1961
- The influence of tannins on the degradation of pectin by pectinase enzymesBiochemical Journal, 1958
- Leuco-anthocyanins. 1. Detection and identification of anthocyanidins formed from leuco-anthocyanins in plant tissuesBiochemical Journal, 1954
- Leuco-anthocyanins. 2. Systematic distribution of leuco-anthocyanins in leavesBiochemical Journal, 1954