| Literature DB >> 28786751 |
Clémence Simon1, Cedric Lion1, Brigitte Huss1, Anne-Sophie Blervacq1, Corentin Spriet1, Yann Guérardel1, Christophe Biot1, Simon Hawkins1.
Abstract
Lignin is a polyphenolic polymer of the plant cell wall formed by the oxidative polymerization of 3 main monomers called monolignols that give rise to the lignin H-, G- and S-units. Together with cellulose and hemicelluloses, lignin is a major component of plant biomass that is widely exploited by humans in numerous industrial processes. Despite recent advances in our understanding of monolignol biosynthesis, our current understanding of the spatio-temporal regulation of their transport and polymerization is more limited. In a recent publication, we have reported the development of an original Bioorthogonal Labeling Imaging Sequential Strategy (BLISS) that allows us to visualize the simultaneous incorporation dynamics of H and G monolignol reporters into lignifying cell walls of the flax stem. 11 Here, we extend the application of this strategy to other plant organs such as roots and rapidly discuss some of the contributions and perspectives of this new technique for improving our understanding of the lignification process in plants.Entities:
Keywords: CuAAC; Lignin; SPAAC; bioorthogonal chemistry; cell wall; chemical probes; click chemistry; dual labeling; fibers; flax; metabolic engineering; monolignol
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28786751 PMCID: PMC5616161 DOI: 10.1080/15592324.2017.1359366
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Signal Behav ISSN: 1559-2316
Figure 1.Bioorthogonal Labeling Imaging Sequential Strategy (BLISS) illustrating incorporation of monolignol chemical reporters into cell walls in 2-month-old flax roots. (1) Dual labeling strategy consisting of monolignol feeding followed by specific click ligation of fluorescent probes to incorporated HAZ-units (SPAAC) and GALK-units (CuAAc) in freshly synthesized lignin. (2,3) View of BLISS-labeled hand section of flax roots previously incubated with native p-coumaryl and coniferyl alcohols as negative control (2), or with azide-labeled p-coumaryl alcohol (HAZ) and alkyne-labeled coniferyl alcohol (GALK) monolignol reporters (3) and observed by confocal microscopy. Blue channel: lignin autofluorescence (405 nm); green channel: HAZ-unit fluorescence (526 nm); red channel: GALK-unit fluorescence (565 nm). Xylem (X), phloem (Ph), endodermis (E), cortex (C), differentiating xylem (arrow).
Figure 2.Confocal microscope imaging of monolignol chemical reporter incorporation into cell walls of 2-month-old flax roots. (1) View of BLISS-labeled root secondary xylem (X), phloem (Ph) and endodermis (E) with merged lignin autofluorescence channel (blue, 405 nm), HAZ fluorescence (green, 526 nm) channel and GALK (red, 565 nm) channel. (2) 2D slice and 3D reconstruction of confocal z-stack zoom of a secondary xylem fiber-tracheid and neighboring cells in xylem differentiation zone. Note differential incorporation of chemical reporters vs autofluorescence highlighting cell wall layers of fiber tracheids (FT), vessels (V) or ray cells (R) as well as cell wall substructures such as pits (★). (3) 2D slice and 3D reconstruction of confocal z-stack zoom of root endodermis region showing incorporation of monolignol chemical reporters into radial and tangential cell walls of endodermal cells. The Casparian strip (★) only displays autofluorescence and does not incorporate HAZ or GALK.
Figure 3.Monolignol chemical reporter incorporation into endodermal and inner cortical cell walls of 2-month-old flax roots. (1) HAZ channel, green, 526 nm; (2) GALK channel, red, 565 nm; (3) merged HAZ and GALK channels; (4) associated fluorogram illustrating the anti-correlation between GALK and HAZ incorporation in this region. Indeed, few pixels are found on the co-localization diagonal except for the background while high green fluorescence is associated to low red signal (cortex) and vice-versa (endodermis). Pericycle (P), Endodermis (E), Cortex (C).