| Literature DB >> 26312066 |
Yining Zeng1, Shuai Zhao1, Hui Wei1, Melvin P Tucker2, Michael E Himmel1, Nathan S Mosier3, Richard Meilan4, Shi-You Ding5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In higher plant cells, lignin provides necessary physical support for plant growth and resistance to attack by microorganisms. For the same reason, lignin is considered to be a major impediment to the process of deconstructing biomass to simple sugars by hydrolytic enzymes. The in situ variation of lignin in plant cell walls is important for better understanding of the roles lignin play in biomass recalcitrance.Entities:
Keywords: Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy; Lignin autofluorescence; Lignin–carbohydrate complexes droplets; Stimulated Raman scattering imaging
Year: 2015 PMID: 26312066 PMCID: PMC4549890 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-015-0312-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Fig. 1FLIM analysis of lignin fluorescence lifetime in poplar cell walls. Cell wall FLIM are representative FLIM images of cell wall-based on lignin autofluorescence with 405 nm laser excitation, including untreated (a) and treated with different concentrations of maleic acid (d, g, j, m) indicated on the left. Scale bar 10 μm. Overall cell wall lifetime distribution (b, e, h, k, n) shows the overall lignin fluorescence lifetime distributions from all the cell wall layers. The two red curves are the two fitted Gaussian peaks by fitting the overall histogram. They represent the fluorescence lifetime distributions of dense and loose lignin in cell walls. Cell wall layer lifetime distribution (c, f, i, l, o) shows the individual cell wall layer (CC cell corner, CML compound middle lamella, SW secondary wall) lignin fluorescence lifetime distributions. Lignin models show the fluorescence lifetime distributions of lignin model compounds. Each individual four model compounds (p–s) and mixtures of biphenyl lignin 4-mer and carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) at different ratios (t)
Scheme 1Hypothetical depictions of structures of a the dense lignin consisting primarily of aggregates of lignin with few carbohydrates on the surface, and b the loosely packed lignin consisting primarily of carbohydrate cross-linked with a small amount of lignin
Fig. 2Comparison of FLIM and SRS micrographs in the same lignin droplets (a–h) and the overall fluorescence lifetime of lignin droplets after maleic acid treatment (i–l); droplets lifetime shows the overall lifetime distribution based on analysis of ~50 droplets formed under various maleic acid pretreatment concentrations. Consistently there are bimodal distributions of fluorescence lifetime that correspond to the dense and loosely packed lignin droplets. At low acid concentration (0.025 M) treatment the droplets are more diversified than at high acid concentration. Representative droplets containing loose lignin (a–d) and dense lignin (e–h) are analyzed by FLIM and SRS imaging at the same location. Line-scans are also presented under each image to show the relative intensity. Image size is 10 μm for all images
Fig. 3SRS images of lignin resonance from a typical polar cell wall before and after maleic acid pretreatment with different acid concentrations indicated on the left. The line-scan profiles across the cell wall (dashed lines in corresponding images in the left images) show that the lignin content at secondary cell wall (SW) is more reduced than compound middle lamella (CML)