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Immunocytochemical localisation of para ‐coumaric acid and feruloyl‐arabinose in the cell walls of maize stem
Author(s) -
Migné Carole,
Prensier Gérard,
Utille JeanPierre,
Angibeaud Pierre,
Cornu Agnès,
Grenet Elisabeth
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of the science of food and agriculture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.782
H-Index - 142
eISSN - 1097-0010
pISSN - 0022-5142
DOI - 10.1002/(sici)1097-0010(199811)78:3<373::aid-jsfa129>3.0.co;2-i
Subject(s) - p coumaric acid , arabinose , chemistry , coumaric acid , cell wall , botany , ferulic acid , biology , biochemistry , xylose , fermentation
Two phenolic compounds, p ‐coumaric acid and feruloyl‐arabinose, were localised by immunocytochemistry in the cell walls of the apical internode of two lines of maize (Co125 and W401) of different digestibility. The compounds were detected at two stages of cell maturity in the lignified tissues (sclerenchyma, fibres and xylem) and in the medullary parenchyma, which, in the samples studied, was not lignified. p ‐Coumaric acid is a phenolic acid associated with lignins, which confer resistance on plant cell walls to microbial degradation in the rumen. Feruloyl‐arabinose is a compound associated with xylans, the principal hemicelluloses in Gramineae, which are potentially degradable. Labelling of p ‐coumaric acid decreased in both maize lines with cell age and as the cell walls became lignified. The mass of lignin deposited in the cell walls masked p ‐coumaric acid, thereby making it less accessible to the antibodies. There was an inverse relationship in the labelling of p ‐coumaric acid and feruloyl‐arabinose. Feruloyl‐arabinose was more heavily labelled as the plant cell walls matured in all the lignified tissues of both maize lines and in the parenchyma of the less digestible line. All tissues except the parenchyma were more heavily labelled with both sera in Co125, the more digestible line. © 1998 Society of Chemical Industry.