| Literature DB >> 35885964 |
Min-Ha Kim1, Eun-Kyung Bae2, Hyoshin Lee2, Jae-Heung Ko1.
Abstract
Unlike herbaceous plants, woody plants undergo volumetric growth (a.k.a. secondary growth) through wood formation, during which the secondary xylem (i.e., wood) differentiates from the vascular cambium. Wood is the most abundant biomass on Earth and, by absorbing atmospheric carbon dioxide, functions as one of the largest carbon sinks. As a sustainable and eco-friendly energy source, lignocellulosic biomass can help address environmental pollution and the global climate crisis. Studies of Arabidopsis and poplar as model plants using various emerging research tools show that the formation and proliferation of the vascular cambium and the differentiation of xylem cells require the modulation of multiple signals, including plant hormones, transcription factors, and signaling peptides. In this review, we summarize the latest knowledge on the molecular mechanism of wood formation, one of the most important biological processes on Earth.Entities:
Keywords: biomass; secondary growth; vascular cambium; wood formation; xylem differentiation
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35885964 PMCID: PMC9319765 DOI: 10.3390/genes13071181
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.141
Figure 1Wood formation in plants. (a) Simplified process of wood formation. Wood formation is initiated through cell divisions within the cylindrical vascular cambium layer, formed from the procambium. Then xylem cell differentiation, cell expansion, secondary cell wall (SCW) and pit formation, and programmed cell death (PCD) follow. Vascular cambium formation from procambium is shown in the stem cross-sections from below a tree: xylem (red), phloem (blue), and the cambium (yellow). (b) Stem cross-section and cell diagram for each stage of wood formation. The xylem is formed through the vascular cambium cell division and xylem cell differentiation, cell expansion, secondary cell wall formation and pit formation, and programmed cell death.
Figure 2Molecular regulatory network of xylem cell formation. (a) Vascular cambium cell division and xylem cell differentiation. (b) Secondary cell wall formation, pit formation, and programmed cell death in xylem cell formation. Representative genes were depicted with hormones (blue). Genes with essential roles are described in the text.
Summary of recent wood formation studies.
| Gene Name | Function | Studied Plant Species | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Regulate vascular cambium cell division and secondary xylem development |
| [ | |
| Secondary xylem cell differentiation, direct target of |
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| Increase cambium development |
| [ |
| Regulate cambium cell division |
| [ | |
| Knockdown mutant enhanced vascular cambium proliferation and xylem differentiation |
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| Reduce cytokinin signaling and cambium cell growth |
| [ |
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| Key enzymes in the biosynthesis of major bioactive cytokinins, increase cambium cell division |
| [ |
| Induce vascular cell proliferation |
| [ | |
| Activate vascular cell division |
| [ | |
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| Cytokinin-dependent vascular cell proliferation |
| [ |
| Reduce xylem formation and increase phloem development |
| [ | |
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| Promotes xylem differentiation from procambial cells |
| [ |
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| Reduce xylem differentiation |
| [ |
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| Promote xylem differentiation |
| [ |
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| Increase secondary xylem development |
| [ |
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| [ | |
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| GA over production and cambium proliferation |
| [ |
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| Maintaining the cambium cell population via cell division and inhibiting xylem cell differentiation |
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| Regulation of cambium activity |
| [ |
| Reduce cell division and defect vascular tissue pattern |
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| Reduce cambium cell activity |
| [ |
| Inhibit xylem differentiation by suppression of BES1 and BZR1 |
| [ | |
| Supress cambium cell division |
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| Involved in vascular cambium initiation |
| [ |
| Induce cambium activity and xylem differentiation |
| [ | |
| Involved in xylem differentiation |
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| Master regulators of SCW biosynthesis |
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| Negative regulator of the TDIF-PXY module |
| [ |
| Mutant showed improved xylem differentiation |
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| Inhibition of xylem vessel development |
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| Involved in cell wall loosening |
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| Regulate cell wall loosening through pectin modification |
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| Contributes to the transition of fiber cells from elongation to secondary cell wall deposition |
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| Regulating the movement of transverse cortical microtubules |
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| Involved in regulating secondary cell wall patterns |
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| Direct formation of cell wall pits in metaxylem vessel cells through interaction with cortical microtubules |
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| Regulates the formation of ROP-activated domains |
| [ |
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| Positively regulates pit formation |
| [ |
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| Microtubule degradation through the active ROP-MIDD1 cascade |
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| Mutants resulted in an irregular secondary cell wall with small pits in xylem cells |
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| Interacts with F-actin and promotes actin assembly at pit boundaries. |
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| Interacts with WAL as an ROP effector |
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| Involved in nucleic acid degradation to facilitate nucleotide and phosphate recovery during senescence. |
| [ |
| Function in micro-autolysis within the intact central vacuole |
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| Induce xylem cell death |
| [ |