Characterization of inhibitors of cellulose synthesis in cotton fibers

Abstract
Several compounds were tested for their ability to inhibit the in-vivo synthesis of cellulose and other cell-wall polysaccharides in fibers of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) developing on in-vitro cultured ovules. Inhibitory effects were measured by the ability of the compounds to inhibit the incorporation of radioactivity from [U-14C]glucose into these cell-wall polymers. Of the compounds surveyed, 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile (DCB) was the most effective and specific one for its effects on cellulose synthesis when compared to its effect on the synthesis of other cell-wall components. At 10 μM DCB caused 80% inhibition of cellulose synthesis, and the effect was reversed upon removal of the DCB, with recovery to 90% of the control rate. Two analogs of DCB, 2-chloro-6-fluorobenzonitrile and 2,6-dichlorobenzene carbothiamide, were as specific and nearly as effective as DCB with respect to their effects on cellulose synthesis. Coumarin, generally regarded as an inhibitor of cellulose synthesis in other plant systems, was effective in cotton fibers in millimolar concentrations and, like DCB, was relatively specific with regard to its effect on cellulose synthesis. DCB and coumarin inhibited the synthesis of both primary and secondary wall cellulose. Bacitracin, an inhibitor of the cycling of phosphorylated polyprenols involved in cell-wall synthesis in bacteria, and ethylenediaminetetracetic acid (EDTA) and ethyleneglycol-bis-(β-amino-ethylether)-N,N′-tetracetic acid (EGTA), chelators of civalent cations, were also effective, although only at relatively high concentrations, in inhibiting incorporation of radioactivity into cellulose.