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Book ChapterDOI

Assay methods for pectic enzymes

Alan Collmer, +2 more
- 01 Jan 1988 - 
- Vol. 161, pp 329-335
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TLDR
Three assay procedures are described that permit quantitative assay of hydrolytic and β-eliminative pectic enzymes, respectively, and can guide purification strategies, particularly when used in conjunction with titration curves.
Abstract
Publisher Summary The characterization and purification of a pectic enzyme is often complicated by the presence of other pectic enzymes produced by the source microorganism. This chapter describes three assay procedures that address this problem. Pectic enzymes from Erwinia spp. is used as examples in the chapter. The assays are readily adapted to the analysis of pectic enzyme complexes of other organisms and can be used with crude preparations. Results from plant tissue extracts should be interpreted cautiously, however, because of the prevalence of pectic enzyme inhibitors. The activity stains in the first procedure enable rapid approximation of the number and type of pectic enzymes in the sample and can guide purification strategies, particularly when used in conjunction with titration curves. The second and third procedures permit quantitative assay of hydrolytic and β-eliminative pectic enzymes, respectively. The action patterns of purified pectic enzymes are determined by viscometric and reaction product analyses; oligogalacturonides are resolved by paper chromatography or thin-layer chromatography and detected with bromphenol blue or thiobarbituric acid spray reagent.

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Citations
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Microbial pectinolytic enzymes: A review

TL;DR: Pectinases are one of the most widely distributed enzymes in bacteria, fungi and plants as discussed by the authors, and they have a share of 25% in the global sales of food enzymes.
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Pectate lyases, cell wall degradation and fruit softening.

TL;DR: Pectate lyase-like genes have been isolated from a wide range of plant tissues including germinating seeds, pollen, cell cultures, and ripening fruits and may indicate that these enzymes have a more important role in ripening than previously suspected.
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Manipulation of Strawberry Fruit Softening by Antisense Expression of a Pectate Lyase Gene

TL;DR: An analysis of firmness at three different stages of fruit development showed that the highest reduction of softening in Apel fruit occurred during the transition from the white to the red stage, which indicates that pectate lyase gene is an excellent candidate for biotechnological improvement of fruitsoftening in strawberry.
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The role of trichoderma harzianum protease in the biocontrol of botrytis cinerea

TL;DR: Protease inhibitors, trans-epoxysuccinyl-L-leucylamido-(4-guanidino)butane (E64), antipain hydrochloride, and a mixture of inhibitors, but not pepstatin A, fully or partially nullified the biocontrol effect of T39.
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Endophytic bacteria in grapevine

TL;DR: The nonfastidious, xylem-inhabiting bacteria from a selection of grape cultivars in Nova Scotia have been examined and suggest that many endophytic bacteria may be attached to vessel walls and that the majority are fastidious.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A photometric adaptation of the somogyi method for the determination of glucose

TL;DR: In this paper, the reliability of the various Somogyi-Shaffer-Hartmann (SHH) copper reagents for glucose determination in biological material has been established, which can be accomplished by omission of the iodide and iodate in their preparation, since these interfere with the molybdate color reagents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structure and function of the primary cell walls of plants.

TL;DR: All glycosyl residues (except the residue at the reducing end of an oligosaccharide, which is called a glycose residue) are glycosidically linked at C-l and this fact is assumed in the notation used, and, thus, C-\ is not mentioned.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of Pectic Enzymes in Plant Pathogenesis

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that fragments released from the cell wall by pectic enzymes can elicit plant defense reactions and that the highly pectolytic bacteria, Erwinia chrysanthemi and E. carotovora, are amenable to a powerful array of molecular genetic manipulations.
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