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Abstract
Background and Aims: The softening of ripening fruit involves partial depolymerization of cell-wall pectin by three types of reaction: enzymic hydrolysis, enzymic elimination (lyase-catalysed) and non-enzymic oxidative scission. Two known lyase activities are pectate lyase and rhamnogalacturonan lyase (RGL), potentially causing mid-chain cleavage of homogalacturonan and rhamnogalacturonan-I (RG-I) domains of pectin respectively. However, the important biological question of whether RGL exhibits action in vivo had not been tested.
Methods: We developed a method for specifically and sensitively detecting in-vivo RGL products, based on Driselase digestion of cell walls and detection of a characteristic unsaturated 'fingerprint' product (tetrasaccharide) of RGL action.
Key Results: In model experiments, potato RG-I that had been partially cleaved in vitro by commercial RGL was digested by Driselase, releasing an unsaturated tetrasaccharide ('ΔUA-Rha-GalA-Rha'), taken as diagnostic of RGL action. This highly acidic fingerprint compound was separated from monosaccharides (galacturonate, galactose, rhamnose, etc.) by electrophoresis at pH 2, then separated from ΔUA-GalA (the fingerprint of pectate lyase action) by thin-layer chromatography. The 'ΔUA-Rha-GalA-Rha' was confirmed as 4-deoxy-β-l-threo-hex-4-enopyranuronosyl-(1→2)-l-rhamnosyl-(1→4)-d-galacturonosyl-(1→2)-l-rhamnose by mass spectrometry and acid hydrolysis. Driselase digestion of cell walls from diverse ripe fruits [date, sea buckthorn, cranberry, yew (arils), mango, plum, blackberry, apple, pear and strawberry] yielded the same fingerprint compound, demonstrating that RGL had been acting in vivo in these fruits prior to harvest. The 'fingerprint' : (galacturonate + rhamnose) ratio in digests from ripe dates was approximately 1 : 72 (mol/mol), indicating that ~1.4 % of the backbone Rha→GalA bonds in endogenous RG-I had been cleaved by in-vivo RGL action.
Conclusions: The results provide the first demonstration that RGL, previously known from studies of fruit gene expression, proteomic studies and in-vitro enzyme activity, exhibits enzyme action in the walls of soft fruits and may thus be proposed to contribute to fruit softening.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | mcad197 |
| Pages (from-to) | 547-558 |
| Number of pages | 12 |
| Journal | Annals of Botany |
| Volume | 133 |
| Issue number | 4 |
| Early online date | 5 Jan 2024 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Apr 2024 |
Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)
- cell wall
- Driselase
- fruit softening
- high-voltage paper electrophoresis
- rhamnogalacturonan-I
- rhamnogalacturonan lyase
- pectate lyase
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Dive into the research topics of 'Fruit softening: evidence for rhamnogalacturonan lyase action in vivo in ripe fruit cell walls'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
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Hetero-trans-b-glucanase (HTG), a unique cell-wall remodelling enzyme from Equisetum: action and potential to enhance mechanical properties of cereals
Fry, S. (Principal Investigator) & Hudson, A. (Co-investigator)
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
1/01/16 → 31/12/18
Project: Research