Title: 15'2 Two views of primary cell walls
115.2 Two views of primary cell walls
215.4 Major structural components of the primary
cell wall and their likely arrangement
315.6 A structural model of a cellulose
microfibril (Part 1)
415.6 A structural model of a cellulose
microfibril (Part 2)
5(No Transcript)
615.8 Model of cellulose synthesis by a
multisubunit complex containing cellulose synthase
715.5 Conformational structures of sugars
commonly found in plant cell walls (Part 1)
815.5 Conformational structures of sugars
commonly found in plant cell walls (Part 2)
915.10 Partial structures of common
hemicelluloses (Part 1)
1015.11 Partial structures of the most common
pectins (Part 3)
1115.11 Partial structures of the most common
pectins (Part 4)
1215.13 Pectin structure (Part 2)
1315.14 A repeated hydroxyproline-rich motif from
a molecule of HRGP from tomato
1415.15 A highly branched arabinogalactan molecule
1515.16 Action of xyloglucan endotransglucosylase
(XET)
16Web Figure 13.3.A Partial structure of a
hypothetical lignin molecule from European beech
(Fagus sylvatica ). The phenylpropanoid units
that make up lignin are not linked in a simple,
repeating way. The lignin of beech contains units
derived from coniferyl alcohol, sinapyl alcohol,
and para-coumaryl alcohol in the approximate
ratio 100707 and is typical of angiosperm
lignin. Gymnosperm lignin contains relatively
fewer sinapyl alcohol units. (After Nimz 1974.)