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Plant Physiology 92:413-418 (1990)
© 1990 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Metabolism and Enzymology

Inhibition of Cell Wall-Associated Enzymes in Vitro and in Vivo with Sugar Analogs

Gerald Nagahashi, Shu-I Tu, George Fleet and Sun K. Namgoong

U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Eastern Regional Research Center, 600 East Mermaid Lane, Philadelphia, PA 19118, University of Oxford, Oxford, England

Sugar analogs were used to study the inhibition of cell wall-associated glycosidases in vitro and in vivo. For in vitro characterization, cell walls were highly purified from corn (Zea mays L.) root cortical cells and methods were developed to assay enzyme activity in situ. Inhibitor dependence curves, mode of inhibition, and specificity were determined for three sugar analogs. At low concentrations of castanospermine (CAS), 2-acetamido-1,5-imino-1,2,5-trideoxy-D-glucitol, and swainsonine, these inhibitors showed competitive inhibition kinetics with {beta}-glucosidase, {beta}-GIcNAcase, and {alpha}-mannosidase, respectively. Swainsonine specifically inhibited {alpha}-mannosidase activity, and 2-acetamido-1,5-imino-1,2,5-trideoxy-D-glucitol specifically inhibited {beta}-N-acetyl-hexosamindase activity. However, CAS inhibited a broad spectrum of cell wall-associated enzymes. When the sugar analogs were applied to 2 day old corn seedlings, only CAS caused considerable changes in root growth and development. To ensure that the concentration of inhibitors used in vitro also inhibited enzyme activity in vivo, an in vivo method for measuring cell wall-associated activity was devised.





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