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Chitin

About: Chitin is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 6590 publications have been published within this topic receiving 253993 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The extracellular chitinase produced by Serratia marcescens was obtained in highly purified form by adsorption-digestion on Chitin this article.

151 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Hydrolytic degradation of the chitin polymer is essential for hyphal growth, branching, and septum formation in fungal systems as well as for the normal molting of arthropods.
Abstract: Various pesticides are being used to destabilize, perturb, or inhibit crucial biochemical and physiological targets related to metabolism, growth, development, nervous communication, or behavior in pestiferous organisms. Chitin is an eukaryotic extracellular aminosugar biopolymer, massively produced by most fungal systems and by invertebrates, notably arthropods. Being an integral supportive component in fungal cell wall, insect cuticle, and nematode egg shell, chitin has been considered as a selective target for pesticide action. Throughout the elaborate processes of chitin formation and deposition, only the polymerization events associated with the cell membrane compartment are so far available for chemical interference. Currently, the actinomycetes-derived nucleoside peptide fungicides such as the polyoxins and the insecticidal benzoylaryl ureas have reached commercial pesticide status. The polyoxins and other structurally-related antibiotics like nikkomycins are strong competitive inhibitors of the polymerizing enzyme chitin synthase. The exact biochemical lesion inflicted by the benzoylaryl ureas is still elusive, but a post-polymerization event, such as translocation of chitin chains across the cell membrane, is suggested. Hydrolytic degradation of the chitin polymer is essential for hyphal growth, branching, and septum formation in fungal systems as well as for the normal molting of arthropods. Recently, insect chitinase activity was strongly and specifically suppressed by allosamidin, an actimomycetes-derived metabolite. In part, the defense mechanism in plants against invasion of pathogens is associated with induced chitinases. Chitin, chitosan, and their oligomers are able to act as elicitors which induce enhanced levels of chitinases in various plants. Lectins which bind to N-acetyl-D-glucosamine strongly interfere with fungal and insect chitin synthases. Plant lectins with similar properties may be involved in plant-pathogen interaction inter alia by suppressing fungal invasion.

150 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The enzymes from Trichoderma species that degrade fungal cell walls have been suggested to play an important role in mycoparasitic action against fungal plant pathogens and one of these enzymes was purified to homogeneity and showed an endolytic mode of action on pustulan.
Abstract: The enzymes from Trichoderma species that degrade fungal cell walls have been suggested to play an important role in mycoparasitic action against fungal plant pathogens. The mycoparasite Trichoderma harzianum produces at least two extracellular beta-1,6-glucanases, among other hydrolases, when it is grown on chitin as the sole carbon source. One of these extracellular enzymes was purified to homogeneity after adsorption to its substrate, pustulan, chromatofocusing, and, finally, gel filtration. The apparent molecular mass was 43,000, and the isoelectric point was 5.8. The first 15 amino acids from the N terminus of the purified protein have been sequenced. The enzyme was specific for beta-1,6 linkages and showed an endolytic mode of action on pustulan. Further characterization indicated that the enzyme by itself releases soluble sugars and produces hydrolytic halli on yeast cell walls. When combined with other T. harzianum cell wall-degrading enzymes such as beta-1,3-glucanases and chitinases, it hydrolyzes filamentous fungal cell walls. The enzyme acts cooperatively with the latter enzymes, inhibiting the growth of the fungi tested. Antibodies against the purified protein also indicated that the two identified beta-1,6-glucanases are not immunologically related and are probably encoded by two different genes.

150 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that chitin, an important component of most fungal cell walls, elicited lignification in wheat leaves when applied as a suspension to wounds as well as the soluble derivatives ethylene glycol, ch itin and chitosan.
Abstract: Chitin, an important component of most fungal cell walls, elicited lignification in wheat leaves when applied as a suspension to wounds. The soluble derivatives ethylene glycol, chitin and chitosan were also active, but glucosamine, N-acetylglucosamine and small chitin oligomers did not elicit the response. The fungal glucan pullulan lacked activity, but laminarin, an algal glucan, was a weak elicitor. The response could also be elicited by fungal cell wall preparations. The possible role of chitin and related wall polymers in inducing host-defence mechanisms in wheat is discussed.

150 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that a filigree chitin-based scaffold is an integral component of the I. basta skeleton and can be isolated from the sponge skeletons using an isolation and purification technique based on treatment with alkaline solutions.

149 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023434
2022868
2021271
2020354
2019333
2018271