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Chemical and enzymatic extraction of heavy metal binding polymers from isolated cell walls of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

✍ Scribed by D. Brady; A. D. Stoll; L. Starke; J. R. Duncan


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
594 KB
Volume
44
Category
Article
ISSN
0006-3592

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✦ Synopsis


Isolated cell walls of the yeast Saccharornyces cerevisiae were treated by either chemical (alkali and acid) or enzymatic (protease, mannanase or p-glucuronidase) processes to yield partially purified products. These products were partially characterized by infrared analysis. They were subsequently reacted with heavy metal cation solutions and the quantity of metal accumulated by the cell wall material determined. The Cu2+ ion (0.24, 0.36, 1.12, and 0.60 pmol/mg) was accumulated to a greater extent than either Co2+ (0.13, 0.32, 0.43, and 0.32 pmoV mg) or Cd2+ (0.17,0.34,0.39, and 0.46 pmol/mg) by yeast cell walls, glucan, mannan, and chitin, respectively. The isolated components each accumulated greater quantities of the cations than the intact cell wall. Removal of the protein component of the yeast cell wall by Pronase caused a 29.5% decrease in metal accumulation by yeast cell walls per mass, indicating that protein is a heavy metal accumulating component. The data indicate that the outer mannan-protein layer of the yeast cell wall is more important than the inner glucan-chitin layer in heavy metal cation accumulation.