Cell-wall-associated oxidases extracted from the lignifying xylem of Sitka spruce and ash oxidise sinapyl alcohol at a greater rate than coniferyl alcohol and
Purified cell walls from the lignifying xylem of spruce could oxidise CA by the action of bound oxidase activity and dissolved oxygen (~ 240 ?M) but CA oxidation was increased many fold by the action of the bound peroxidase activity and 240 ?M H2O2. However, the initial dimeric and trimeric products of the peroxidase- and oxidase-catalysed reactions detected by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry were the same and present in similar proportions. This indicates that the oxidation of CA by oxidase or by peroxidase proceeds via the same intermediates and occurs by a similar mechanism.
Insoluble dehydrogenation polymers (DHPs) of CA were formed in similar yields by spruce extracts in the absence (oxidase activity) or presence (peroxidase activity) of H2O2. The peroxidase-catalysed DHPs and the oxidase-catalysed DHPs gave Fourier transform infra-red spectra with maxima that were characteristic of DHPs of CA. However, differences in the comparative intensities of some maxima suggest that the oxidase-catalysed DHPs were less condensed than the peroxidase-catalysed polymers. These findings are discussed with respect to the possible contribution of oxidases to lignin structure in developing wood.
Print ISSN: 0018-3830
Volume: 53, 09/1999
Pages: 503 - 510