| Literature DB >> 26398793 |
Jing Zhang1, Weihua Zou1, Ying Li1, Yongqing Feng1, Hui Zhang1, Zhiliang Wu1, Yuanyuan Tu1, Yanting Wang1, Xiwen Cai2, Liangcai Peng3.
Abstract
Rice is a typical silicon-accumulating crop with enormous biomass residues for biofuels. Silica is a cell wall component, but its effect on the plant cell wall and biomass production remains largely unknown. In this study, a systems biology approach was performed using 42 distinct rice cell wall mutants. We found that silica levels are significantly positively correlated with three major wall polymers, indicating that silica is associated with the cell wall network. Silicon-supplied hydroculture analysis demonstrated that silica distinctively affects cell wall composition and major wall polymer features, including cellulose crystallinity (CrI), arabinose substitution degree (reverse Xyl/Ara) of xylans, and sinapyl alcohol (S) proportion in three typical rice mutants. Notably, the silicon supplement exhibited dual effects on biomass enzymatic digestibility in the mutant and wild type (NPB) after pre-treatments with 1% NaOH and 1% H2SO4. In addition, silicon supply largely enhanced plant height, mechanical strength and straw biomass production, suggesting that silica rescues mutant growth defects. Hence, this study provides potential approaches for silicon applications in biomass process and bioenergy rice breeding.Entities:
Keywords: Biomass digestibility; Biomass production; Cell wall; Plant strength; Rice; Silica
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26398793 DOI: 10.1016/j.plantsci.2015.07.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Sci ISSN: 0168-9452 Impact factor: 4.729