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  5. Cellulose microfibril crystallinity is reduced by mutating C-terminal transmembrane region residues CESA1 <sup>A903V</sup> and CESA3 <sup>T942I</sup> of cellulose synthase

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Article
en
2012

Cellulose microfibril crystallinity is reduced by mutating C-terminal transmembrane region residues CESA1 <sup>A903V</sup> and CESA3 <sup>T942I</sup> of cellulose synthase

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en
2012
Vol 109 (11)
Vol. 109
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1200352109

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Chris Somerville
Chris Somerville

University of California, Berkeley

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Darby Harris
Kendall R. Corbin
Tuo Wang
+12 more

Abstract

The mechanisms underlying the biosynthesis of cellulose in plants are complex and still poorly understood. A central question concerns the mechanism of microfibril structure and how this is linked to the catalytic polymerization action of cellulose synthase (CESA). Furthermore, it remains unclear whether modification of cellulose microfibril structure can be achieved genetically, which could be transformative in a bio-based economy. To explore these processes in planta , we developed a chemical genetic toolbox of pharmacological inhibitors and corresponding resistance-conferring point mutations in the C-terminal transmembrane domain region of CESA1 A903V and CESA3 T942I in Arabidopsis thaliana . Using 13 C solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction, we show that the cellulose microfibrils displayed reduced width and an additional cellulose C4 peak indicative of a degree of crystallinity that is intermediate between the surface and interior glucans of wild type, suggesting a difference in glucan chain association during microfibril formation. Consistent with measurements of lower microfibril crystallinity, cellulose extracts from mutated CESA1 A903V and CESA3 T942I displayed greater saccharification efficiency than wild type. Using live-cell imaging to track fluorescently labeled CESA, we found that these mutants show increased CESA velocities in the plasma membrane, an indication of increased polymerization rate. Collectively, these data suggest that CESA1 A903V and CESA3 T942I have modified microfibril structure in terms of crystallinity and suggest that in plants, as in bacteria, crystallization biophysically limits polymerization.

How to cite this publication

Darby Harris, Kendall R. Corbin, Tuo Wang, Ryan Gutierrez, Ana L. Ferreira Bertolo, Carloalberto Petti, Detlef‐M. Smilgies, José M. Estevez, Dario Bonetta, Breeanna R. Urbanowicz, David W. Ehrhardt, Chris Somerville, Jocelyn K. C. Rose, Mei Hong, Seth DeBolt (2012). Cellulose microfibril crystallinity is reduced by mutating C-terminal transmembrane region residues CESA1 <sup>A903V</sup> and CESA3 <sup>T942I</sup> of cellulose synthase. , 109(11), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1200352109.

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Publication Details

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Article

Year

2012

Authors

15

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1200352109

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