rhamnogalacturonan-i and sodium-carbonate

rhamnogalacturonan-i has been researched along with sodium-carbonate* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for rhamnogalacturonan-i and sodium-carbonate

ArticleYear
Simultaneous knock-down of six β-galactosidase genes in petunia petals prevents loss of pectic galactan but decreases petal strength.
    Plant physiology and biochemistry : PPB, 2017, Volume: 113

    Galactose (Gal) is incorporated into cell wall polysaccharides as flowers open, but then is lost because of β-galactosidase activity as flowers mature and wilt. The significance of this for flower physiology resides in the role of galactan-containing polysaccharides in the cell wall, which is still largely unresolved. To investigate this, transcript accumulation of six cell wall-associated β-galactosidases was simultaneously knocked down in 'Mitchell' petunia (Petunia axillaris x (P. axillaris x P. hybrida)) flower petals. The multi-PhBGAL RNAi construct targeted three bud- and three senescence-associated β-galactosidase genes. The petals of the most down-regulated line (GA19) were significantly disrupted in galactose turnover during flower opening, and at the onset of senescence had retained 86% of their galactose compared with 20% in the controls. The Gal content of Na

    Topics: Aging; Base Sequence; beta-Galactosidase; Carbonates; Cell Wall; Down-Regulation; Flowers; Galactans; Galactose; Gene Knockdown Techniques; Pectins; Petunia; Plant Extracts; Plants, Genetically Modified; Polysaccharides

2017