Identification of novel transcription factors regulating secondary cell wall formation in Arabidopsis

Archive ouverte

Cassan-Wang, H. | Goué, N. | Saidi, M.N. | Legay, S. | Sivadon, Pierre | Goffner, D. | Grima Pettenati, Jacqueline

Edité par CCSD ; Frontiers -

cited By 26. International audience. The presence of lignin in secondary cell walls (SCW) is a major factor preventing hydrolytic enzymes from gaining access to cellulose, thereby limiting the saccharification potential of plant biomass. To understand how lignification is regulated is a prerequisite for selecting plant biomass better adapted to bioethanol production. Because transcriptional regulation is a major mechanism controlling the expression of genes involved in lignin biosynthesis, our aim was to identify novel transcription factors (TFs) dictating lignin profiles in the model plant Arabidopsis. To this end, we have developed a post-genomic approach by combining four independent in-house SCW-related transcriptome datasets obtained from (1) the fiber cell wall-deficient wat1 Arabidopsis mutant, (2) Arabidopsis lines over-expressing either the master regulatory activator EgMYB2 or (3) the repressor EgMYB1 and finally (4) Arabidopsis orthologs of Eucalyptus xylem-expressed genes. This allowed us to identify 502 up- or down-regulated TFs. We preferentially selected those present in more than one dataset and further analyzed their in silico expression patterns as an additional selection criteria. This selection process led to 80 candidates. Notably, 16 of them were already proven to regulate SCW formation, thereby validating the overall strategy. Then, we phenotyped 43 corresponding mutant lines focusing on histological observations of xylem and interfascicular fibers. This phenotypic screen revealed six mutant lines exhibiting altered lignification patterns. Two of them [Bel-like HomeoBox6 (blh6) and a zinc finger TF] presented hypolignified SCW. Three others (myb52, myb-like TF, hb5) showed hyperlignified SCW whereas the last one (hb15) showed ectopic lignification. In addition, our meta-analyses highlighted a reservoir of new potential regulators adding to the gene network regulating SCW but also opening new avenues to ultimately improve SCW composition for biofuel production. © 2013 Cassan-Wang, Goué, Saidi, Legay, Sivadon, Goffner and Grima-Pettenati.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

EgMYB1, an R2R3 MYB transcription factor from eucalyptus negatively regulates secondary cell wall formation in Arabidopsis and poplar

Archive ouverte | Legay, S. | CCSD

cited By 68. International audience. Summary: The eucalyptus R2R3 transcription factor, EgMYB1 contains an active repressor motif in the regulatory domain of the predicted protein. It is preferentially expressed in ...

EgMYB2, a new transcriptional activator from Eucalyptus xylem, regulates secondary cell wall formation and lignin biosynthesis

Archive ouverte | Goicoechea, M. | CCSD

EgMYB2, a member of a new subgroup of the R2R3 MYB family of transcription factors, was cloned from a library consisting of RNA from differentiating Eucalyptus xylem. EgMYB2 maps to a unique locus on the Eucalyptus grandis linkage...

CCR gene in Eucalyptus: a model of functional variability in forest trees. Un modèle de variabilité fonctionnelle chez les arbres forestiers : le gène CCR d'eucalyptus

Archive ouverte | Gion, Jean-Marc, J.-M. | CCSD

National audience. Nucleotidic polymorphism of Cinnamoyl CoA Reductase (CCR) gene and its relation with lignin content is studied within a breeding population of Eucalyptus urophylla S.T. Blake (“Timor Mountain Gum”...

Chargement des enrichissements...