ascorbic-acid and galactonolactone

ascorbic-acid has been researched along with galactonolactone* in 17 studies

Other Studies

17 other study(ies) available for ascorbic-acid and galactonolactone

ArticleYear
Galactone-γ-lactone-dependent ascorbate biosynthesis alters wheat kernel maturation.
    Plant biology (Stuttgart, Germany), 2012, Volume: 14, Issue:4

    Kernel development and maturation involve several well-characterised events, such as changes in ascorbate (ASC) metabolism, protein synthesis and storage, programmed cell death (PCD) of starchy endosperm and tissue dehydration. Despite many studies focusing on these events, whether and how they are metabolically related to each other, remains to be elucidated. In the present investigation, the changes in ASC-related metabolism, PCD occurrence, kernel filling and dehydration have been analysed during kernel maturation, over a 3-year period in plants grown under normal conditions and in plants displaying modified ASC synthesis. The obtained results suggest that ASC plays a pivotal role in the network of events characterising kernel maturation. During this process, a decrease in ASC content occurs. When ASC biosynthesis is improved in the kernel, by feeding the plants with its immediate precursor, L-galactone-γ-lactone (GL), the decrease in ASC, observed during kernel maturation, is delayed. As a consequence, ascorbate peroxidase (APX) activity is also enhanced. Moreover, a delay in the ASC decrease permits a delay in PCD occurring in kernel storage tissues and in kernel dehydration. Interestingly, the data emerging from the present investigation suggest that the delay in the decrease in ASC content and APX activity also improves kernel filling. The relevance of the ascorbate-dependent redox regulation for kernel productivity is discussed.

    Topics: Ascorbate Peroxidases; Ascorbic Acid; Cell Death; Oxidation-Reduction; Seeds; Sugar Acids; Triticum

2012
Galactonolactone oxidoreductase from Trypanosoma cruzi employs a FAD cofactor for the synthesis of vitamin C.
    Biochimica et biophysica acta, 2011, Volume: 1814, Issue:5

    Trypanosoma cruzi, the aetiological agent of Chagas' disease, is unable to salvage vitamin C (l-ascorbate) from its environment and relies on de novo synthesis for its survival. Because humans lack the capacity to synthesize ascorbate, the trypanosomal enzymes involved in ascorbate biosynthesis are interesting targets for drug therapy. The terminal step in ascorbate biosynthesis is catalyzed by flavin-dependent aldonolactone oxidoreductases belonging to the vanillyl-alcohol oxidase (VAO) protein family. Here we studied the properties of recombinant T. cruzi galactonolactone oxidoreductase (TcGAL), refolded from inclusion bodies using a reverse micelles system. The refolded enzyme shows native-like secondary structure and is active with both l-galactono-1,4-lactone and d-arabinono-1,4-lactone. At odd with an earlier claim, TcGAL employs a non-covalently bound FAD as redox-active cofactor. Moreover, it is shown for the first time that TcGAL can use molecular oxygen as electron acceptor. This is in line with the absence of a recently identified gatekeeper residue that prevents aldonolactone oxidoreductases from plants to act as oxidases.

    Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Ascorbic Acid; Chromatography, Thin Layer; Circular Dichroism; Flavin-Adenine Dinucleotide; Molecular Sequence Data; Oxidoreductases; Protozoan Proteins; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid; Sugar Acids; Trypanosoma cruzi

2011
Expression of aspartyl protease and C3HC4-type RING zinc finger genes are responsive to ascorbic acid in Arabidopsis thaliana.
    Journal of experimental botany, 2011, Volume: 62, Issue:10

    Ascorbate (AsA) is a redox buffer and enzyme cofactor with various proposed functions in stress responses and growth. The aim was to identify genes whose transcript levels respond to changes in leaf AsA. The AsA-deficient Arabidopsis mutant vtc2-1 was incubated with the AsA precursor L-galactono-1,4-lactone (L-GalL) to increase leaf AsA concentration. Differentially expressed genes screened by DNA microarray were further characterized for AsA responsiveness in wild-type plants. The analysis of 14 candidates by real-time PCR identified an aspartyl protease gene (ASP, At1g66180) and a C3HC4-type RING zinc finger gene (AtATL15, At1g22500) whose transcripts were rapidly responsive to increases in AsA pool size caused by L-GalL and AsA supplementation and light. Transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing an AtATL15 promoter::luciferase reporter confirmed that the promoter is L-GalL, AsA, and light responsive. The expression patterns of ASP and AtATL15 suggest they have roles in growth regulation. The promoter of AtATL15 is responsive to AsA status and will provide a tool to investigate the functions of AsA in plants further.

    Topics: Arabidopsis; Arabidopsis Proteins; Ascorbic Acid; Aspartic Acid Proteases; Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis; Plants, Genetically Modified; Polymerase Chain Reaction; Sugar Acids

2011
Conversion of L-galactono-1,4-lactone to L-ascorbate is regulated by the photosynthetic electron transport chain in Arabidopsis.
    Bioscience, biotechnology, and biochemistry, 2008, Volume: 72, Issue:10

    In this study we focused on the effects of light irradiation and the addition of L-galactono-1,4-lactone (L-GalL) on the conversion of exogenous L-GalL to L-ascorbate (AsA) and the total AsA pool size in detached leaves of Arabidopsis plants and transgenic plants expressing the rat L-gulono-1,4-lactone oxidase gene. Increases in the total AsA level in L-GalL-treated leaves depended entirely on light irradiation. Treatment with an inhibitor of photosynthetic electron transport together with L-GalL reduced the increase in total AsA under light. Light, particularly the redox state of photosynthetic electron transport, appeared to play an important role in the regulation of the conversion of L-GalL to AsA in the mitochondria, reflecting the cellular level of AsA in plants.

    Topics: Arabidopsis; Ascorbic Acid; Electron Transport Chain Complex Proteins; Lactones; Light; Photosynthesis; Plant Leaves; Plants, Genetically Modified; Sugar Acids

2008
Increase in ascorbate-glutathione metabolism as local and precocious systemic responses induced by cadmium in durum wheat plants.
    Plant & cell physiology, 2008, Volume: 49, Issue:3

    Durum wheat plants (Triticum durum cv Creso) were grown in the presence of cadmium (0-40 microM) and analysed after 3 and 7 d for their growth, oxidative stress markers, phytochelatins, and enzymes and metabolites of the ascorbate (ASC)-glutathione (GSH) cycle. Cd exposure produced a dose-dependent inhibition of growth in both roots and leaves. Lipid peroxidation, protein oxidation and the decrease in the ascorbate redox state indicate the presence of oxidative stress in the roots, where H2O2 overproduction and phytochelatin synthesis also occurred. The activity of the ASC-GSH cycle enzymes significantly increased in roots. Consistently, a dose-dependent accumulation of Cd was evident in these organs. On the other hand, no oxidative stress symptoms or phytochelatin synthesis occurred in the leaves; where, at least during the time of our analysis, the levels of Cd remained irrelevant. In spite of this, enzymes of the ASC-GSH cycle significantly increased their activity in the leaves. When ASC biosynthesis was enhanced, by feeding plants with its last precursor, L-galactono-gamma-lactone (GL), Cd uptake was not affected. On the other hand, the oxidative stress induced in the roots by the heavy metal was alleviated. GL treatment also inhibited the Cd-dependent phytochelatin biosynthesis. These results suggest that different strategies can successfully cope with heavy metal toxicity. The changes that occurred in the ASC-GSH cycle enzymes of the leaves also suggest that the whole plant improved its antioxidant defense, even in those parts which had not yet been reached by Cd. This precocious increase in the enzymes of the ASC-GSH cycle further highlight the tight regulation and the relevance of this cycle in the defense against heavy metals.

    Topics: Ascorbic Acid; Cadmium; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Glutathione; Oxidation-Reduction; Phytochelatins; Plant Leaves; Plant Roots; Sugar Acids; Triticum

2008
The terminal step in vitamin C biosynthesis in Trypanosoma cruzi is mediated by a FMN-dependent galactonolactone oxidase.
    The Biochemical journal, 2007, Nov-01, Volume: 407, Issue:3

    Humans lack the ability to synthesize vitamin C (ascorbate) due to the absence of gulonolactone oxidase, the last enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway in most other mammals. The corresponding oxidoreductase in trypanosomes therefore represents a target that may be therapeutically exploitable. This is reinforced by our observation that Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas' disease, lacks the capacity to scavenge ascorbate from its environment and is therefore dependent on biosynthesis to maintain intracellular levels of this vitamin. Here, we show that T. cruzi galactonolactone oxidase (TcGAL) can utilize both L-galactono-gamma-lactone and D-arabinono-gamma-lactone as substrates for synthesis of vitamin C, in reactions that obey Michaelis-Menten kinetics. It is >20-fold more active than the analogous enzyme from the African trypanosome Trypanosoma brucei. FMN is an essential cofactor for enzyme activity and binds to TcGAL non-covalently. In other flavoproteins, a histidine residue located within the N-terminal flavin-binding motif has been shown to be crucial for cofactor binding. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we show that the corresponding residue in TcGAL (Lys-55) is not essential for this interaction. In contrast, we find that histidine and tryptophan residues (His-447 and Trp-448), localized within a C-terminal motif (HWXK) that is a feature of ascorbate-synthesizing enzymes, are necessary for the FMN association. The conserved lysine residue within this motif (Lys-450) is not required for cofactor binding, but its replacement by glycine renders the protein completely inactive.

    Topics: Animals; Ascorbic Acid; Chlorocebus aethiops; Flavin Mononucleotide; Humans; Kinetics; Oxidoreductases Acting on CH-CH Group Donors; Substrate Specificity; Sugar Acids; Trypanosoma cruzi; Vero Cells

2007
Changes in intracellular and apoplastic peroxidase activity, ascorbate redox status, and root elongation induced by enhanced ascorbate content in Allium cepa L.
    Journal of experimental botany, 2005, Volume: 56, Issue:412

    Onions (Allium cepa L.) treated with external ascorbic acid or with the immediate precursor of its synthesis L-galactono-gamma-lactone show a stimulated elongation rate of the roots and an increase in the number of new radicles appearing at the bulb base. Treatment with both molecules resulted in an enhanced accumulation of ascorbate and dehydroascorbate along the root axis, but the distribution of these redox forms was not uniform along the root, as detected in intracellular (symplastic) and extracellular (apoplastic) compartments. Thus, those radicular zones metabolically more active, such as the meristem and the elongation zone, accumulated the highest amount of both redox forms of ascorbate. On the other hand, ascorbate and L-galactono-gamma-lactone also stimulated cytosolic glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity and inhibited peroxidase activity as deduced from in vivo and in vitro experiments. Differences were also found when comparing apoplastic and symplastic activities. These results are compatible with the idea of an ascorbate-mediated stimulation of root growth by inhibiting cell wall stiffening and increasing root metabolism.

    Topics: Ascorbic Acid; Dehydroascorbic Acid; Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase; Onions; Oxidation-Reduction; Peroxidases; Plant Roots; Sugar Acids

2005
A study of the L-ascorbate biosynthetic capacity of apple fruit.
    Communications in agricultural and applied biological sciences, 2005, Volume: 70, Issue:2

    Topics: Ascorbic Acid; Chloroplasts; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Fruit; Glutathione; Hydrogen Peroxide; Malus; Sugar Acids; Superoxides

2005
Long-distance transport of L-ascorbic acid in potato.
    BMC plant biology, 2004, Sep-17, Volume: 4

    Following on from recent advances in plant AsA biosynthesis there is increasing interest in elucidating the factors contributing to the L-ascorbic acid (AsA) content of edible crops. One main objective is to establish whether in sink organs such as fruits and tubers, AsA is synthesised in situ from imported photoassimilates or synthesised in source tissues and translocated via the phloem. In the current work we test the hypothesis that long-distance transport is involved in AsA accumulation within the potato tuber, the most significant source of AsA in the European diet.. Using the EDTA exudation technique we confirm the presence of AsA in the phloem of potato plants and demonstrate a correlation between changes in the AsA content of source leaves and that of phloem exudates. Comparison of carboxyflourescein and AgNO3 staining is suggestive of symplastic unloading of AsA in developing tubers. This hypothesis was further supported by the changes in AsA distribution during tuber development which closely resembled those of imported photoassimilates. Manipulation of leaf AsA content by supply of precursors to source leaves resulted in increased AsA content of developing tubers.. Our data provide strong support to the hypothesis that long-distance transport of AsA occurs in potato. We also show that phloem AsA content and AsA accumulation in sink organs can be directly increased via manipulation of AsA content in the foliage. We are now attempting to establish the quantitative contribution of imported AsA to overall AsA accumulation in developing potato tubers via transgenic approaches.

    Topics: Ascorbic Acid; Biological Transport; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Fluoresceins; Galactose; Glucose; Light; Microscopy, Confocal; Plant Leaves; Plant Structures; Silver Staining; Solanum tuberosum; Sugar Acids

2004
Localization of ascorbic acid, ascorbic acid oxidase, and glutathione in roots of Cucurbita maxima L.
    Journal of experimental botany, 2004, Volume: 55, Issue:408

    To understand the function of ascorbic acid (ASC) in root development, the distribution of ASC, ASC oxidase, and glutathione (GSH) were investigated in cells and tissues of the root apex of Cucubita maxima. ASC was regularly distributed in the cytosol of almost all root cells, with the exception of quiescent centre (QC) cells. ASC also occurred at the surface of the nuclear membrane and correspondingly in the nucleoli. No ASC could be observed in vacuoles. ASC oxidase was detected by immunolocalization mainly in cell walls and vacuoles. This enzyme was particularly abundant in the QC and in differentiating vascular tissues and was absent in lateral root primordia. Administration of the ASC precursor L-galactono-gamma-lactone markedly increased ASC content in all root cells, including the QC. Root treatment with the ASC oxidized product, dehydroascorbic acid (DHA), also increased ASC content, but caused ASC accumulation only in peripheral tissues, where DHA was apparently reduced at the expense of GSH. The different pattern of distribution of ASC in different tissues and cell compartments reflects its possible role in cell metabolism and root morphogenesis.

    Topics: Amaryllidaceae Alkaloids; Ascorbate Oxidase; Ascorbic Acid; Cell Membrane; Cell Wall; Cucurbita; Dehydroascorbic Acid; Glutathione; Phenanthridines; Plant Roots; Seedlings; Sugar Acids; Tissue Distribution; Vacuoles

2004
L-Ascorbic acid is accumulated in source leaf phloem and transported to sink tissues in plants.
    Plant physiology, 2002, Volume: 130, Issue:2

    L-Ascorbic acid (AsA) was found to be loaded into phloem of source leaves and transported to sink tissues. When L-[(14)C]AsA was applied to leaves of intact plants of three different species, autoradiographs and HPLC analysis demonstrated that AsA was accumulated into phloem and transported to root tips, shoots, and floral organs, but not to mature leaves. AsA was also directly detected in Arabidopsis sieve tube sap collected from an English green aphid (Sitobion avenae) stylet. Feeding a single leaf of intact Arabidopsis or Medicago sativa with 10 or 20 mM L-galactono-1,4-lactone (GAL-L), the immediate precursor of AsA, lead to a 7- to 8-fold increase in AsA in the treated leaf and a 2- to 3-fold increase of AsA in untreated sink tissues of the same plant. The amount of AsA produced in treated leaves and accumulated in sink tissues was proportional to the amount of GAL-L applied. Studies of the ability of organs to produce AsA from GAL-L showed mature leaves have a 3- to 10-fold higher biosynthetic capacity and much lower AsA turnover rate than sink tissues. The results indicate AsA transporters reside in the phloem, and that AsA translocation is likely required to meet AsA demands of rapidly growing non-photosynthetic tissues. This study also demonstrates that source leaf AsA biosynthesis is limited by substrate availability rather than biosynthetic capacity, and sink AsA levels may be limited to some extent by source production. Phloem translocation of AsA may be one factor regulating sink development because AsA is critical to cell division/growth.

    Topics: Animals; Aphids; Arabidopsis; Ascorbic Acid; Autoradiography; Biological Transport; Carbon Radioisotopes; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Flowers; Medicago sativa; Plant Leaves; Plant Roots; Plant Stems; Sugar Acids; Time Factors

2002
Hydroponically cultivated radish fed L-galactono-1,4-lactone exhibit increased tolerance to ozone.
    Planta, 2002, Volume: 214, Issue:3

    Leaf L-ascorbate content of an ozone (O3)-sensitive radish genotype (Raphanus sativus L. cv. Cherry Belle) was increased 2-fold by feeding hydroponically cultivated plants L-galactono- 1,4-lactone (GalL). Plants were grown in controlled-environment chambers ventilated with charcoal/Purafil-filtered air, and administered one of two O3 fumigation regimes: chronic exposure (75 nmol O3 mol(-1) for 7 h day(-1) for 21 days) and acute exposure (180 nmol O3 mol(-1) for 9 h). Chronic O3 exposure decreased root growth by 11% in plants maintained in pure nutrient solution (-GalL), but resulted in no change in root growth in GalL-fed plants (+GalL). Similarly, GalL-feeding counteracted the negative effects of O3 on CO2 assimilation rate observed in control plants (-GalL). Under acute O3 exposure, GalL-fed plants showed none of the visible symptoms of injury, which were extensive in plants not fed GalL. Leaf CO2 assimilation rate was decreased by acute 03 exposure in both GalL treatments, but the extent of the decline was less marked in GalL-fed plants. No significant changes in stomatal conductance resulted from GalL treatment, so O3 Uptake into leaves was equivalent in + GalL and -GalL plants. Feeding GalL, on the other hand, enhanced the level of ascorbate, and resulted in the maintenance of the redox state of ascorbate under acute O3 fumigation, in both the leaf apoplast and symplast. The effect of GalL treatment on ascorbate pools was consistent with the reduction in O3 damage observed in GalL-fed plants. Attempts to model O3 interception by the ascorbate pool in the leaf apoplast suggested a greater capacity for O3 detoxification in GalL-fed plants, which corresponded with the increase in O3 tolerance observed. However, modelled data for GalL-fed plants suggested that additional constituents of the leaf apoplast may play an important role in the attenuation of environmentally-relevant O3 fluxes.

    Topics: Air Pollutants; Ascorbic Acid; Biological Transport; Brassicaceae; Dehydroascorbic Acid; Hydroponics; Models, Biological; Ozone; Plant Leaves; Sugar Acids; Time Factors

2002
Artificially increased ascorbate content affects zeaxanthin formation but not thermal energy dissipation or degradation of antioxidants during cold-induced photooxidative stress in maize leaves.
    Planta, 2000, Volume: 210, Issue:6

    Infiltrating detached maize (Zea mays L.) leaves with L-galactono-1,4-lactone (L-GAL) resulted in a 4-fold increase in the content of leaf ascorbate. Upon exposure to high irradiance (1000 mumol photons m-2 s-1) at 5 degrees C, L-GAL leaves de-epoxidized the xanthophyll-cycle pigments faster than the control leaves; the maximal ratio of de-epoxidized xanthophyll-cycle pigments to the whole xanthophyll-cycle pool was the same in both leaf types. The elevated ascorbate content, together with the faster violaxanthin de-epoxidation, did not affect the degree of photoinhibition and the kinetics of the recovery from photoinhibition, assayed by monitoring the maximum quantum efficiency of photosystem II primary photochemistry (Fv/Fm). Under the experimental conditions, the thermal energy dissipation seems to be zeaxanthin-independent since, in contrast to the de-epoxidation, the decrease in the efficiency of excitation-energy capture by open photosystem II reaction centers (F'v/F'm) during the high-irradiance treatment at low temperature showed the same kinetic in both leaf types. This was also observed for the recovery of the maximal fluorescence after stress. Furthermore, the elevated ascorbate content did not diminish the degradation of pigments or alpha-tocopherol when leaves were exposed for up to 24 h to high irradiance at low temperature. Moreover, a higher content of ascorbate appeared to increase the requirement for reduced glutathione.

    Topics: Ascorbic Acid; beta Carotene; Chlorophyll; Chlorophyll A; Cold Temperature; Energy Metabolism; Light; Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes; Oxidative Stress; Photosynthesis; Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins; Photosystem II Protein Complex; Pigments, Biological; Plant Leaves; Sugar Acids; Xanthophylls; Zea mays; Zeaxanthins

2000
The biosynthesis of erythroascorbate in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and its role as an antioxidant.
    Free radical biology & medicine, 2000, Jan-15, Volume: 28, Issue:2

    This study investigated the ability of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to synthesize ascorbate and its 5-carbon analogue erythroascorbate from a variety of precursors, and their importance as antioxidants in this organism. Studies of ascorbate and analogues in micro-organisms have been reported previously, but their function as antioxidants have been largely ignored. Ascorbate and erythroascorbate concentrations in yeast extracts were measured spectrophotometrically, and their levels and identity were checked using liquid chromatography-electrospray mass spectrometry. The yeast was readily able to synthesize ascorbate from L-galactono-1,4-lactone or erythroascorbate from D-arabinose and D-arabino-1,4-lactone, whereas L-gulono-1,4-lactone was a much poorer substrate for ascorbate biosynthesis. In untreated cells, the concentration of ascorbate-like compounds was below the level of detection of the methods of analysis used in this study (approximately 0.1 mM). Intracellular ascorbate and erythroascorbate were oxidized at high concentrations of tert-butylhydroperoxide, but not hydrogen peroxide. Their synthesis was not increased in response to low levels of stress, however, and preloading with erythroascorbate did not protect glutathione levels during oxidative stress. This study provides new information on the metabolism of ascorbate and erythroascorbate in S. cerevisiae, and suggests that erythroascorbate is of limited importance as an antioxidant in S. cerevisiae.

    Topics: Arabinose; Ascorbic Acid; Chromatography, Liquid; Hydrogen Peroxide; Kinetics; Oxidants; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization; Stereoisomerism; Sugar Acids; tert-Butylhydroperoxide

2000
The biosynthetic pathway of vitamin C in higher plants.
    Nature, 1998, May-28, Volume: 393, Issue:6683

    Vitamin C (L-ascorbic acid) has important antioxidant and metabolic functions in both plants and animals, but humans, and a few other animal species, have lost the capacity to synthesize it. Plant-derived ascorbate is thus the major source of vitamin C in the human diet. Although the biosynthetic pathway of L-ascorbic acid in animals is well understood, the plant pathway has remained unknown-one of the few primary plant metabolic pathways for which this is the case. L-ascorbate is abundant in plants (found at concentrations of 1-5 mM in leaves and 25 mM in chloroplasts) and may have roles in photosynthesis and transmembrane electron transport. We found that D-mannose and L-galactose are efficient precursors for ascorbate synthesis and are interconverted by GDP-D-mannose-3,5-epimerase. We have identified an enzyme in pea and Arabidopsis thaliana, L-galactose dehydrogenase, that catalyses oxidation of L-galactose to L-galactono-1,4-lactone. We propose an ascorbate biosynthesis pathway involving GDP-D-mannose, GDP-L-galactose, L-galactose and L-galactono-1,4-lactone, and have synthesized ascorbate from GDP-D-mannose by way of these intermediates in vitro. The definition of this biosynthetic pathway should allow engineering of plants for increased ascorbate production, thus increasing their nutritional value and stress tolerance.

    Topics: Arabidopsis; Ascorbic Acid; Carbohydrate Epimerases; Galactose; Galactose Dehydrogenases; Glucose; Hordeum; In Vitro Techniques; Mannose; NAD; Pisum sativum; Sugar Acids

1998
Ascorbic acid as a factor controlling "in vivo" its biosynthetic pathway.
    Bollettino della Societa italiana di biologia sperimentale, 1989, Volume: 65, Issue:10

    The capacity of ascorbic acid biosynthesis in potato tuber tissue is closely correlated with the ascorbic acid content of the cells: the lower the endogenous content of ascorbic acid, the greater its biosynthesis. At the highest level of ascorbic acid found in the cells, the biosynthetic capacity is virtually zero. In these conditions, adding glucose (the first precursor of ascorbic acid) has no effect whatsoever, whereas adding galactono-gamma-lactone (the last precursor) induces a high rate of ascorbic acid synthesis. It is suggested that AA biosynthesis is subject to a regulatory mechanism "in vivo" which controls an initial step in the biosynthetic pathway. The last step in this pathway, catalyzed by galactone oxidase, is never blocked and, moreover, its activity is greater than that of the preceding steps.

    Topics: Ascorbic Acid; Glucose; In Vitro Techniques; Solanum tuberosum; Sugar Acids

1989
Occurrence in yeast of L-galactonolactone oxidase which is similar to a key enzyme for ascorbic acid biosynthesis in animals, L-gulonolactone oxidase.
    Archives of biochemistry and biophysics, 1978, Volume: 191, Issue:2

    Topics: Ascorbic Acid; Lactones; Mitochondria; Molecular Weight; Oxygen Consumption; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Spectrophotometry; Substrate Specificity; Sugar Acids; Sugar Alcohol Dehydrogenases

1978