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Purification and characterization of isoforms of cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase fromEucalyptusxylem

โœ Scribed by D. Goffner; I. Joffroy; J. Grima-Pettenati; C. Halpin; M. E. Knight; W. Schuch; A. M. Boudet


Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Weight
956 KB
Volume
188
Category
Article
ISSN
0032-0935

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โœฆ Synopsis


Two distinct isoforms of cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase, CAD 1 and CAD 2, have been purified to homogeneity from xylem-enriched fractions of Eucalyp~ tus gunii Hook and partially characterized. They differ greatly in terms of both physical and biochemical properties, and can be separated by hydrophobic interaction chromatography on Phenyl Sepharose CL-4B. The native molecular weight of of CAD 1 is 38 kDa as determined by gel-filtration chromatography on Superose 6, and this isoform is likely to be a monomer since it yields a polypeptide of 35 kDa upon sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. It has a low substrate affinity for coniferyl and p-coumaryl alcohols and their corresponding aldehydes. No activity with sinapyl aldehyde and alcohol was detected. The more abundant isoform is CAD 2, which has a native molecular weight of 83 kDa and is a dimer composed of two subunits of slightly different molecular weights (42-43 kDa). These subunits show identical peptide patterns after digestion with N-chlorosuccinimide. The isoform, CAD 2, has a high substrate affinity for all the substrates tested. The two isoforms are immunologically distinct as polyclonal antibodies raised against CAD 2 do not cross-react with CAD 1. The characterization of two forms of CAD exhibiting such marked differences indicates their involvement in specific pathways of monolignol utilisation.


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