| Literature DB >> 16658028 |
Abstract
Cultures of Corynebacterium insidiosum produce an extra-cellular phytotoxic glycopeptide that possesses the ability to wilt plant cuttings. Wilt induced by this glycopeptide is directly dependent upon time and upon concentration with measureable wilt occurring in 40 nm solutions in 1 hour. The organism produces 1.3 grams toxin/liter of culture medium. The toxin was purified, and the physical, chemical, and biological properties were measured. The glycopeptide has an empirical formula of C(108)H(226)O(132)N based on 1 atom of nitrogen. The molecular weight as estimated by light scattering and column gel chromatography indicated values approximating 5 x 10(6). The toxin does not dissociate into small molecular weight subunits when treated with 8 m urea or 30% pyridine.The toxin has a specific optical rotation of [alpha](5460 A) (34.5 C) = -166 degrees , an intrinsic viscosity of 0.2307 dl/g, and decomposes at 260 C. It has a blue chromophore due to copper chelation at a concentration of 75 moles copper/mole toxin. Mannose, glucose, galactose and l-fucose, with trace amounts of rhamnose and an unidentified reducing sugar, comprise 83.1% of the toxin. An unknown organic acid appearing chemically similar to a keto-deoxy organic acid comprises 8.8% of the toxin. Lysine(2), arginine(1), aspartic acid(1), threonine(1), serine(1), glutamic acid(1), glycine(2), alanine(2), valine(2), leucine(2), and isoleucine(1), form a single peptide with glycine as the sole NH(2)-terminal amino acid. The peptide-carbohydrate linkage appears to be of a glycosidic nature involving the -OH of threonine. This single peptide composes 2.6% of the toxin, and there are 77 moles peptide/mole of purified glycopeptide.Entities:
Year: 1972 PMID: 16658028 PMCID: PMC366032 DOI: 10.1104/pp.49.5.676
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Physiol ISSN: 0032-0889 Impact factor: 8.340