| Literature DB >> 31781810 |
Nora Gigli-Bisceglia1, Timo Engelsdorf2, Thorsten Hamann3.
Abstract
The walls surrounding the cells of all land-based plants provide mechanical support essential for growth and development as well as protection from adverse environmental conditions like biotic and abiotic stress. Composition and structure of plant cell walls can differ markedly between cell types, developmental stages and species. This implies that wall composition and structure are actively modified during biological processes and in response to specific functional requirements. Despite extensive research in the area, our understanding of the regulatory processes controlling active and adaptive modifications of cell wall composition and structure is still limited. One of these regulatory processes is the cell wall integrity maintenance mechanism, which monitors and maintains the functional integrity of the plant cell wall during development and interaction with environment. It is an important element in plant pathogen interaction and cell wall plasticity, which seems at least partially responsible for the limited success that targeted manipulation of cell wall metabolism has achieved so far. Here, we provide an overview of the cell wall polysaccharides forming the bulk of plant cell walls in both monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants and the effects their impairment can have. We summarize our current knowledge regarding the cell wall integrity maintenance mechanism and discuss that it could be responsible for several of the mutant phenotypes observed.Entities:
Keywords: Cell wall polysaccharides; Plant cell wall metabolism; Plant cell wall signaling; Plant defense; Plant environment interaction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31781810 PMCID: PMC7256069 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-019-03388-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Fig. 1Global overview of proteins mediating primary (PCW) and secondary cell wall (SCW) formation in dicots (Arabidopsis) and monocots (Oryza). Demonstrated or putative (indicated by ?) protein localizations are displayed in panel a based on data mostly derived from Arabidopsis. Enzymes such as PMEIs, PAEs and PMEs, which have been found in the apoplast, are listed outside the cells in panels a and b. Ellipses represent Golgi bodies/stacks with enzymes located to highlight their positions either inside the Golgi or associated with Golgi membranes. Circles containing enzymes like GALS1/2/3 or CTL1 represent Golgi-derived vesicles. Grey, dashed circles near the nucleus (black ellipse) represent the endoplasmic reticulum. b Summarizes putative localizations of proteins in Oryza. Abbreviations are explained in main text. Protein localizations are based on the following references: [16, 34, 45, 47, 68, 74, 104, 125, 138, 155, 156, 160, 161, 163, 164, 167, 168, 171, 180, 255–270]
List of the genes and mutant phenotypes described
| Name | Mutant | Mutant phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| AtCESA1 | Reduced cellulose content in primary cell walls, reduced growth, radial cell swelling ( Reduced growth, swollen roots, bulging epidermal cells in cotyledons and reduced crystalline cellulose content ( Resistance to | [ | |
| AtCESA2 | Phenotypically normal. | [ | |
| AtCESA3 | Seedlings exhibit constitutive JA and ET accumulation, reductions in cellulose levels, are smaller and have roots thicker than wt ( Reduced plant growth, ectopic lignification and reduced cellulose content in seedlings ( | [ | |
| AtCESA4 | Reduced cellulose levels in secondary cell walls. Defects in cell wall thickness in xylem vessels. Reduced mechanical strength of the stems. Adult plants are smaller than wt | [ | |
| AtCESA5 | Mutant plants exhibit defective seed coat mucilage synthesis. | [ | |
| AtCESA6 | Defects in cellulose production during primary cell wall formation, short hypocotyls and ectopic lignification ( No obvious growth phenotypes but ISX resistant ( | [ | |
| AtCESA7 | Reduced cellulose levels in secondary cell walls. Defects in cell wall thickness in xylem vessels. Reduced mechanical strength of the stems. Adult plants are smaller than wt | [ | |
| AtCESA8 | Reduced cellulose in secondary cell walls. Defects in cell wall thickness in xylem vessels. Reduced mechanical strength of the stems. Adult plants are smaller than wt | [ | |
| AtCESA9 | Mutant plants display wt-like phenotype. Epidermal cells in seed coats of | [ | |
| AtCESA10 | No obvious mutant phenotypes | [ | |
| KORRIGAN | Dwarf, cellulose deficient, display defects during cytokinesis | [ | |
| KOBITO | Dwarf, sterile, short hypocotyls, incomplete cell wall during cytokinesis, cellulose deficient | [ | |
| CHITINASE-LIKE 1 | Cellulose deficient, the mutation affects xyloglucan structure. Mutant plants are smaller than wt, have shorter hypocotyls and swollen roots. | [ | |
| CHITINASE-LIKE 2 | Mutant plants are similar to the wt but display ectopic lignification in stems and etiolated hypocotyls | [ | |
| CELLULOSE SYNTHASE INTERACTING1 | Dwarf, short hypocotyls, swollen cells, altered microtubule organization and cellulose deficient | [ | |
| MUNC13-LIKE PROTEIN | Cellulose deficient, mutants are smaller than wt. This mutant displays short hypocotyls and roots. Adult plants are significantly smaller than the wt | [ | |
| STELLO1 | No obvious mutant growth phenotype. Functionally redundant with STL2 | [ | |
| STELLO2 | No obvious mutant growth phenotype. Functionally redundant with STL1, double | [ | |
| KINESIN-LIKE PROTEIN | Dwarf plants with reduced mechanical strength. Mutant plants display changes in cellulose orientation with no overall reduction of cellulose | [ | |
| CELLULOSE SYNTHASE-LIKE PROTEIN D2 | Root hair formation defective with altered cytoskeleton organization | [ | |
| CELLULOSE SYNTHASE-LIKE PROTEIN D3 | Root hair formation defective resulting in root hair rupture | [ | |
| CELLULOSE SYNTHASE-LIKE PROTEIN D5 | No obvious growth phenotype, required for cell plate formation | [ | |
| CELLULOSE SYNTHASE-LIKE PROTEIN A7 | Pollen tube growth defects and embryogenesis failure. Overexpression of | [ | |
| CELLULOSE SYNTHASE-LIKE PROTEIN A9 | Reduced glucomannan. No obvious mutant phenotypes | [ | |
| XYG-XYLOSYLTRANSFERASE | No obvious mutant phenotypes | [ | |
| XYG-XYLOSYLTRANSFERASE | No obvious mutant growth phenotypes. Double | [ | |
| XYLOGLUCAN GALACTOSYLTRANSFERASE | Cabbage-like phenotype, smaller plants with smaller rosettes. Altered xyloglucan composition. MUR3-dependent phenotype can be rescued by knocking out | [ | |
| FUCOSYLTRANSFERASE 1 | No obvious mutant growth phenotype, impaired in xyloglucan fucosylation | [ | |
| PUTATIVE FAMILY 43 GLYCOSYL TRANSFERASE | Irregular xylem phenotype, reduced cell wall thickness due to xylan chain elongation defects. Reduced xylose levels | [ | |
| PUTATIVE FAMILY 43 GLYCOSYL TRANSFERASE | No obvious mutant phenotypes | [ | |
| PUTATIVE FAMILY 43 GLYCOSYL TRANSFERASE | Slightly smaller plants, with thinner vessels. Reduced xylose levels | [ | |
| PUTATIVE FAMILY 43 GLYCOSYL TRANSFERASE | No obvious mutant phenotypes | [ | |
| PUTATIVE FAMILY 47 GLYCOSYL TRANSFERASE | Overall normal plants with reduced xylose levels associated with a mild irregular xylem phenotype | [ | |
| PUTATIVE FAMILY 47 GLYCOSYL TRANSFERASE | No obvious mutant phenotypes | [ | |
| GLUCURONYL TRANSFERASE | No obvious mutant growth phenotype. Significantly reduced levels of GlcA-substituted xylan | [ | |
| GLUCURONYL TRANSFERASE | No obvious mutant phenotype. Significantly reduced levels of GlcA-substituted xylan. Double | [ | |
| GLUCURONYLTRANSFERASE | No obvious mutant growth phenotype. Significantly reduced levels of GlcA-substituted xylan. Triple | [ | |
| GLUCURONOXYLAN-METHYLTRANSERASE | No obvious mutant growth phenotype. Reduced methylation of glucuronoxylan | [ | |
| GALACTURONOSYLTRANSFERASE 1-GAUT 8 | Significantly reduced growth and decrease in both HG and xylan-synthase activity | [ | |
| GALACTURONOSYLTRANSFERASE 10-GAUT 10 | Mutant seedlings exhibit growth defects and short roots in the absence of sucrose | [ | |
| GALACTURONOSYLTRANSFERASE 11-GAUT 11 | Identified as HG α-GalA transferase. KO mutant seeds produce less RG I and mucilage in coat epidermal cells (SCE) | [ | |
| PUTATIVE GLYCOSYLTRANSFERASE | Required for pectin synthesis in seed coat epidermal cells. KO mutant seeds produce less mucilage | [ | |
| PUTATIVE METHYLTRANSFERASE | Defective in cell adhesion, characterized by reduced HG content | [ | |
| PUTATIVE HOMOGALACTURONAN-METHYLTRANSFERASE | No obvious growth defects and normal pectin methylation in KO plants. | [ | |
| PECTIN METHYLTRANSFERASE-CGR2 | No obvious mutant growth phenotype. Slight reduction in uronic acids and pectin methylation | [ | |
| PECTIN METHYLTRANSFERASE- CGR3 | No obvious growth phenotypes. | [ | |
| XYLOGALACTURONAN-XYLOSYLTRANSFERASE | No obvious mutant growth phenotype. Reduced xylose levels associated with a reduction in xylogalacturonan content | [ | |
| GOLGI GDP- | Mutant growth phenotype is rescued by application of boric acid. Mutant lines exhibit reduced levels of L-galactose in side-chain A of RG-II | [ | |
| GDP-MANNOSE 4,6 DEHYDRATASE ACTIVITY | KO plants are defective in L-fucose, content in both pectin and hemicellulose. Reduced strength to mechanical force. Phenotype can be rescued by boric acid application | [ | |
| GALACTAN SYNTHASE 1 | No obvious mutant growth phenotype. KO plants display decreased β-1,4-galactan content. Reduced galactose in stems. Decreased galactose in seeds | [ | |
| GALACTAN SYNTHASE 2 | No obvious mutant growth phenotype but decreased β-1,4-galactan content. Decreased galactose levels in seeds | [ | |
| GALACTAN SYNTHASE 3 | No obvious mutant growth phenotype. Mutant plants display decreased β-1,4-galactan content. Reduced galactose in stems | [ | |
| RHAMNOGALACTURONAN-II XYLOSYLTRANSFERASE-1 | No obvious mutant growth phenotype. Involved in the xylosylation of the internal fucose moiety RG II | [ | |
| RHAMNOGALACTURONAN-II XYLOSYLTRANSFERASE-2 | No obvious mutant growth phenotype. Involved in the xylosylation of the internal fucose moiety RG II | [ | |
| RHAMNOGALACTURONAN-II XYLOSYLTRANSFERASE-3 | Short siliques. KO plants are impaired in pollen tube growth | [ | |
| No obvious mutant growth phenotype. KO plants characterized by reduced wall acetylation of both pectic and non-pectic polysaccharides. KO plants show increase resistance to | [ | ||
| No obvious mutant growth phenotype. KO plants show reduced RG I acetylation and enhanced drought stress resistance | [ | ||
| KO plants show reduced rosette size. Enhanced resistance to powdery mildew and | [ | ||
| MURUS8 | KO plants have no obvious mutant growth phenotype but exhibit reductions in rhamnogalacturonan-I and rhamnose content as well as enhanced resistance to | [ | |
| PECTIN METHYLESTERASE 5 | Involved in regulating HG methylesterification in stems. | [ | |
| PECTIN METHYLESTERASE INHIBITOR 3 | Involved in regulating pectin de-metylesterification in apical meristems. | [ | |
| PECTIN METHYLESTERASE 35 | KO plants exhibit reduced mechanical strength in the basal part of the inflorescence stems. Reduced cell wall thickness in cortical cells of mature stems, possibly due to changes HG de-methylesterification | [ | |
| RECEPTOR-LIKE PROTEIN 44 | Adult KO plants exhibit stunted growth, reduced petiole length and rosette diameter. Mutant seedlings show reduced root and hypocotyl length in high sucrose levels as well as salt oversensitivity | [ | |
| WALL-ASSOCIATED KINASE 1 | No obvious mutant growth phenotype. WAK1 overexpression leads to enhance callose deposition in response to wounding and exogenous OG application. WAK1 overexpression is associated with enhanced | [ | |
| WALL-ASSOCIATED KINASE 2 | In the absence of sucrose | [ | |
| OsCESA7 (rice) | Smaller rice plants with brittle culm phenotype. Reduced resistance to mechanical force and cellulose deficient | [ | |
| OsCESA4 (rice) | Cellulose reduction and overall fragility of the mutant plants. Cellulose reduction is associated to enhanced lignin accumulation in stems and leaves | [ | |
| COBRA-like protein (rice) | Cellulose deficient enhanced lignification and reduced resistance to mechanical force associated to brittle culm phenotype. Exhibit reduced leaf elongation | [ | |
| COBRA-like protein—(rice) | Brittle culm phenotype, reduced lignification of the nodes. Cellulose and glucuronosyl arabinoxylan deficient | [ | |
| GA20-oxidase (Sorghum) | Cellulose deficient mutant, dramatically reduced growth, gibberellin synthesis impaired. This mutation affects the expression of Sorghum | [ | |
| Cellulose synthase-like F6 (rice) | Reduced plant height and smaller stems. Impaired in MLG synthesis | [ | |
| KINESIN-LIKE PROTEIN (rice) | Dramatically reduced growth, with short roots and internodes. Culms display brittle phenotype with reduced cell wall strength | [ | |
| GLYCOSYLTRANSFERASE FAMILY 61(rice) | Mutant plants exhibit reduced growth. Xylose-deficient loss-of-function rice mutant. | [ | |
| PECTIN ACETYLESTERASE1 (black cottonwood) | PtPAE1 | Overexpression in tobacco leads to reduction in acetyl groups of pectins | [ |
| GALACTURONOSYLTRANSFERASE 4 (switchgrass, poplar) | Involved in the synthesis of HG. Reduced expression of | [ | |
| POLYGALACTURONASE 1 | Rice plants overexpressing BURP16 are phenotypically normal. At cellular level | [ |
Proteins involved in CWI maintenance in dicotyledonous plants
| Name | Mutant | Functions and mutant phenotypes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| RECEPTOR-LIKE PROTEIN KINASE THESEUS 1 | Member of the CrRLK1L family. Required for ISX-induced CWD JA/SA/lignin. KO alleles partially suppress | [ | |
| RECEPTOR-LIKE PROTEIN KINASE FERONIA | Member of the CrRLK1L family. May act as pectin integrity sensor. KO plants have dramatic growth defects and pollinations is reduced. Required for response to RALF22 and 23. KO mutants show enhanced responses to ISX-induced CWD | [ | |
| RECEPTOR-LIKE PROTEIN KINASE HERCULES1 | Member of the CrRLK1L family. Single mutants are phenotypically normal. | [ | |
| RECEPTOR-LIKE PROTEIN KINASE HERCULES2 | Member of the CrRLK1L family. Single mutants are phenotypically normal. Enhanced responses to ISX-induced CWD | [ | |
| RECEPTOR-LIKE PROTEIN KINASE ERULUS | Member of the CrRLK1L family. Involved in root hair growth. KO mutants show reduced root hair length. Plants are characterized by reduced XyG content | [ | |
| LRR RECEPTOR-LIKE KINASE | Single KO mutants show no obvious growth phenotype and reduced responses to ISX-induced CWD. Inhibition of FEI1 and 2 affects root length and cell expansion in response to high concentration of sucrose. Double mutants show cellulose deficiency and anisotropic cell expansion via ACC-mediated pathway | [ | |
| MID1-COMPLEMENTING ACTIVITY 1 | Encodes a stretch-activated Ca++channel. Complements mid1 yeast mutant and is required for activating Calcium-dependent CWD-induced signalling pathway. Adult plants are slightly smaller. Required to generate Calcium spikes in response to cold shock, | [ | |
| MID1-COMPLEMENTING ACTIVITY 2 | [ | ||
| MECHANOSENSITIVE ION CHANNEL PROTEIN 2 | Chloroplast-localized mechanosensitive ion channel and homologue of MSL3. Mutant plants exhibit reduced rosette size | [ | |
| MECHANOSENSITIVE ION CHANNEL PROTEIN 3 | Homologue of MSL2. | [ | |
| NITRATE REDUCTASE 1 | KO plants show normal development | ||
| NITRATE REDUCTASE 2 | KO plants show normal development | [ | |
| WALL STRESS RESPONSE 1/DIRIGENT-LIKE PROTEIN 7 | KO plants show normal development and reduced responses to CBI-induced CWD (reduced SA levels) and enhanced | [ | |
| WALL STRESS RESPONSE 4/PXY/TDR-CORRELATED 3 | KO plants show normal development. Reduced cellulose content in stem and leaves. Reduced responses to CBI-induced CWD (JA and lignification) | [ |
Fig. 2Overview of CWI signaling components, their interactions and coordination between CWI and PTI signaling. Mechanical distortion of the CW induces CWI responses through THE1 and leads to production of elicitor peptides PEP1 and PEP3, which can suppress CWI responses and growth via PEPR1/2 (represented here by PEPR1) [198]. In parallel to mechanical distortion, the action of THE1 can be regulated by RALF34, which binds to THE1 at high apoplastic pH, leading to further alkalinisation of the apoplast [233]. THE1 activates CWI responses via MCA1 and FEI2 and NIA1 NIA2-dependent processes, which repress growth actively [198]. RALF1 and RALF23 induce alkalinization of the apoplast in a FER-dependent manner [247, 250]. Both of them also affect hormone signaling pathways through FER: RALF23 by inhibiting the de-stabilizing effect of FER on the transcription factor MYC2, a master regulator of JA signaling; RALF1 by activating ABI2, a repressor of ABA signaling [247–249]. In addition, RALF23 has been shown to inhibit FER’s scaffold activity for pattern-recognition receptors (PRR) and their co-receptor BAK1, thus reducing sensitivity of the plant to respective PAMPs [232]. In addition to being involved in chemical signaling through PAMPs, RALFs and phytohormones, FER is capable of sensing physical signals from the CW, possibly through LRX proteins linking FER to CW [234]. Brown bars represents the cell wall (CW), grey bars represent the plasma membrane (PM). The white space in between the CW and PM represents the CW–PM interphase, where solutes can diffuse freely and changes in the mechanical forces are being sensed. Abbreviations are explained in main text