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Dwarfism of high‐monolignol Arabidopsis plants is rescued by ectopic LACCASE overexpression

Authors :
Mendel L. Perkins
Mathias Schuetz
Faride Unda
Rebecca A. Smith
Richard Sibout
Natalie J. Hoffmann
Darren C. J. Wong
Simone D. Castellarin
Shawn D. Mansfield
Lacey Samuels
Source :
Plant Direct, Vol 4, Iss 9, Pp n/a-n/a (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Abstract Lignin is a key secondary cell wall chemical constituent, and is both a barrier to biomass utilization and a potential source of bioproducts. The Arabidopsis transcription factors MYB58 and MYB63 have been shown to upregulate gene expression of the general phenylpropanoid and monolignol biosynthetic pathways. The overexpression of these genes also results in dwarfism. The vascular integrity, soluble phenolic profiles, cell wall lignin, and transcriptomes associated with these MYB‐overexpressing lines were characterized. Plants with high expression of MYB58 and MYB63 had increased ectopic lignin and the xylem vessels were regular and open, suggesting that the stunted growth is not associated with loss of vascular conductivity. MYB58 and MYB63 overexpression lines had characteristic soluble phenolic profiles with large amounts of monolignol glucosides and sinapoyl esters, but decreased flavonoids. Because loss of function lac4 lac17 mutants also accumulate monolignol glucosides, we hypothesized that LACCASE overexpression might decrease monolignol glucoside levels in the MYB‐overexpressing plant lines. When laccases related to lignification (LAC4 or LAC17) were co‐overexpressed with MYB63 or MYB58, the dwarf phenotype was rescued. Moreover, the overexpression of either LAC4 or LAC17 led to wild‐type monolignol glucoside levels, as well as wild‐type lignin levels in the rescued plants. Transcriptomes of the rescued double MYB63‐OX/LAC17‐OX overexpression lines showed elevated, but attenuated, expression of the MYB63 gene itself and the direct transcriptional targets of MYB63. Contrasting the dwarfism from overabundant monolignol production with dwarfism from lignin mutants provides insight into some of the proposed mechanisms of lignin modification‐induced dwarfism.

Subjects

Subjects :
Botany
QK1-989

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
24754455
Volume :
4
Issue :
9
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Plant Direct
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8d1e9c5292904a5e8fb65f3ee7d26dbc
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/pld3.265