Abstract

AbstractThe scab fungus Cladosporium cucumerinum can use pectins and polygalacturonic acid as sole sources of carbon. Cellulose and Ca‐polygalacturonate are not available carbon sources for the fungus. When growing on sucrose or pectin, pectinase is produced. In these cases the production of cellulase is insignificant. On a mixture of pectin and carboxymethylcellulose also cellulase is produced.Both pectinase and cellulase are released into the culture filtrate when the fungus grows on cell walls without ionic proteins, whereas only cellulase is released when cell walls with ionic proteins are the carbon source. Pectinase produced by the pathogen can bind to isolated cell walls. The bound pectinase can be extracted with 1 M NaCl from cell walls without ionic proteins, but not from cell walls with ionic proteins.A water‐extract or 1 M NaCl‐extract of cucumber hypocotyls with visible disease symptoms contains cellulase but no pectinase activity. Lack of pectinase activity in the 1 M NaCl‐extract may be due to inhibition by a component that could be extracted by NaCl from the cucumber cell walls.

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