Reconstructing the suberin pathway in poplar by chemical and transcriptomic analysis of bark tissues
Autor: | Isabel Molina, Meghan K Rains, Nayana D. G. de Silva |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine Physiology Plant Science Biology Cork engineering.material Lignin 01 natural sciences Cell wall Transcriptome 03 medical and health sciences Gene Expression Regulation Plant Suberin Botany Plant Stems Gene Expression Profiling fungi food and beverages 15. Life on land Meristem Lipids Populus 030104 developmental biology Polyphenol Waxes visual_art Plant Bark visual_art.visual_art_medium engineering Bark Cork cambium 010606 plant biology & botany |
Zdroj: | Tree Physiology. 38:340-361 |
ISSN: | 1758-4469 |
DOI: | 10.1093/treephys/tpx060 |
Popis: | The tree bark periderm confers the first line of protection against pathogen invasion and abiotic stresses. The phellogen (cork cambium) externally produces cork (phellem) cells that are dead at maturity; while metabolically active, these tissues synthesize cell walls, as well as cell wall modifications, namely suberin and waxes. Suberin is a heteropolymer with aliphatic and aromatic domains, composed of acylglycerols, cross-linked polyphenolics and solvent-extractable waxes. Although suberin is essentially ubiquitous in vascular plants, the biochemical functions of many enzymes and the genetic regulation of its synthesis are poorly understood. We have studied suberin and wax composition in four developmental stages of hybrid poplar (Populus tremula x Populus alba) stem periderm. The amounts of extracellular ester-linked acyl lipids per unit area increased with tissue age, a trend not observed with waxes. We used RNA-Seq deep-sequencing technology to investigate the cork transcriptome at two developmental stages. The transcript analysis yielded 455 candidates for the biosynthesis and regulation of poplar suberin, including genes with proven functions in suberin metabolism, genes highlighted as candidates in other plant species and novel candidates. Among these, a gene encoding a putative lipase/acyltransferase of the GDSL-motif family emerged as a suberin polyester synthase candidate, and specific isoforms of peroxidase and laccase genes were preferentially expressed in cork, suggesting that their corresponding proteins may be involved in cross-linking aromatics to form lignin-like polyphenolics. Many transcriptional regulators with possible roles in meristem identity, cork differentiation and acyl-lipid metabolism were also identified. Our work provides the first large-scale transcriptomic dataset on the suberin-synthesizing tissue of poplar bark, contributing to our understanding of tree bark development at the molecular level. Based on these data, we have proposed a number of hypotheses that can be used in future research leading to novel biological insights into suberin biosynthesis and its physiological function. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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