Results 211 to 220 of about 13,131 (250)
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Seed Science Research, 2002
AbstractSpecific chitinases accumulate in seeds of many species as part of their normal developmental programme. Some chitinases can also be induced in developing and germinating seeds in response to microbial attack. All known seed isoforms belong to classes I, II, IV and VII, which are encoded byChiagenes, as well as to the more divergent class III ...
L. Gomez +3 more
openaire +1 more source
AbstractSpecific chitinases accumulate in seeds of many species as part of their normal developmental programme. Some chitinases can also be induced in developing and germinating seeds in response to microbial attack. All known seed isoforms belong to classes I, II, IV and VII, which are encoded byChiagenes, as well as to the more divergent class III ...
L. Gomez +3 more
openaire +1 more source
Canadian Journal of Botany, 1994
Within the last 10 years, much attention has been focused on the role chitinases play within the plant. Evidence is strong that they are antifungal proteins, yet they may also play a part in a nonspecific stress response and can be developmentally regulated. They consist of several enzyme classes and are produced in many plants by small gene families.
Lawrence S. Graham, Mariam B. Sticklen
openaire +1 more source
Within the last 10 years, much attention has been focused on the role chitinases play within the plant. Evidence is strong that they are antifungal proteins, yet they may also play a part in a nonspecific stress response and can be developmentally regulated. They consist of several enzyme classes and are produced in many plants by small gene families.
Lawrence S. Graham, Mariam B. Sticklen
openaire +1 more source
2013
Insect chitinases belong to family 18 of the glycoside hydrolase superfamily (GH18) and comprise endo-splitting enzymes that retain the anomeric β-(1,4) configuration of the cleavage products. However, some of them have lost their catalytic activity but retained the chitin binding activity and/or possess imaginal disc growth factor activity.
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Insect chitinases belong to family 18 of the glycoside hydrolase superfamily (GH18) and comprise endo-splitting enzymes that retain the anomeric β-(1,4) configuration of the cleavage products. However, some of them have lost their catalytic activity but retained the chitin binding activity and/or possess imaginal disc growth factor activity.
openaire +2 more sources
Classification of chitinases modules
1999Chitinases frequently display a modular structure featuring a catalytic domain attached to one or several ancillary noncatalytic domains whose function is often chitin binding. Gene cloning and DNA sequencing have allowed the determination of a massive number of amino acid sequences of chitinases during the last 10 years.
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Plant chitinases and their role in plant defense: A comprehensive review
Enzyme and Microbial Technology, 2022Kiransinh N Rajput, Rushikesh Joshi
exaly
Bacterial chitinases: genetics, engineering and applications
World Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology, 2022Murugan Kumar +2 more
exaly
Bacterial Chitinases and Their Role in Human Infection
Infection and Immunity, 2023Jason R Devlin, Judith Behnsen
exaly

