6 resultados para Équation de Pell
em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI
Resumo:
Ozone (O3) deleteriously affects organisms ranging from humans to crop plants, yet little is understood regarding the underlying mechanisms. In plants, O3 decreases CO2 assimilation, but whether this could result from direct O3 action on guard cells remained unknown. Potassium flux causes osmotically driven changes in guard cell volume that regulate apertures of associated microscopic pores through which CO2 is supplied to the photosynthetic mesophyll tissue. We show in Vicia faba that O3 inhibits (i) guard cell K+ channels that mediate K+ uptake that drives stomatal opening; (ii) stomatal opening in isolated epidermes; and (iii) stomatal opening in leaves, such that CO2 assimilation is reduced without direct effects of O3 on photosynthetic capacity. Direct O3 effects on guard cells may have ecological and agronomic implications for plant productivity and for response to other environmental stressors including drought.
Resumo:
Clostridium cellulovorans uses not only cellulose but also xylan, mannan, pectin, and several other carbon sources for its growth and produces an extracellular multienzyme complex called the cellulosome, which is involved in plant cell wall degradation. Here we report a gene for a cellulosomal subunit, pectate lyase A (PelA), lying downstream of the engY gene, which codes for cellulosomal enzyme EngY. pelA is composed of an ORF of 2,742 bp and encodes a protein of 914 aa with a molecular weight of 94,458. The amino acid sequence derived from pelA revealed a multidomain structure, i.e., an N-terminal domain partially homologous to the C terminus of PelB of Erwinia chrysanthemi belonging to family 1 of pectate lyases, a putative cellulose-binding domain, a catalytic domain homologous to PelL and PelX of E. chrysanthemi that belongs to family 4 of pectate lyases, and a duplicated sequence (or dockerin) at the C terminus that is highly conserved in enzymatic subunits of the C. cellulovorans cellulosome. The recombinant truncated enzyme cleaved polygalacturonic acid to digalacturonic acid (G2) and trigalacturonic acid (G3) but did not act on G2 and G3. There have been no reports available to date on pectate lyase genes from Clostridia.