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Role of cell wall degradation enzymes during the aerenchyma formation in sugarcane roots

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Author(s):
Adriana Grandis
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Instituto de Biociências (IBIOC/SB)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Marcos Silveira Buckeridge; Marcia Regina Braga; Igor Cesarino; Eduardo Purgatto; Marie Anne van Sluys
Advisor: Marcos Silveira Buckeridge
Abstract

The resistance of plant cell walls to enzymatic hydrolysis is one of the main bottlenecks of the development of technology of production of cellulosic ethanol. It is believed that the modifications in cell walls related to processes of storage mobilization, aerenchyma formation, fruit ripening and senescence, for instance, involve the activation of functional moduli that culminate in alterations of cell walls. These moduli are: 1) signal perception to start the process; 2) Programmed Cell Death (PCD); 3) cell separation; 4) cell expansion; 5) hydrolysis of hemicelluloses and 6) hydrolysis of cellulose. In the case of the formation of lysigenous aerenchyma, the process starts with PCD and is followed by the release of glycosil hydrolases that act on the degradation and/or cell wall modifications, forming air spaces in the cortex of the root. The formation of aerenchyma in the roots of sugarcane is a constitutive phenomenon and little is known about the mechanisms of modification that occur in cell walls during its development. Thus, the present study focused on the visualization of the patterns of variation of gene expression, proteins and enzyme activities associated to the formation of aerenchyma in roots of sugarcane in order to understand the role of the cell wall hydrolases and some proteins related to PCD in cell wall modifications along the process. Five root segments of 1cm each, starting from root apex, were used. A gradual centripetal formation of aerenchyma was recorded in the cortex of developing roots. Analyses of the transcriptional, proteomic and enzyme activity profiles during the process revealed that several enzymes act on cell wall modifications. The glycosil hydrolases belonging to the Cazy families GH1. GH3, GH17, GH18, as well as expansins, cellulose synthase, laccase, calreticulin, calmodulin and other proteins related to pectin degradation have been found along the segments, mainly after segment 2. According to the data on transcriptomics and proteomics, it is suggested that enzymes attack polysaccharides during the initial stages of aerenchyma formation (seg. 2 and 3). The attack of the enzymes occurs mainly on pectins and β-glucan. Conversely, the data point out to the deposition (or maintenance) of xyloglucan, xylan and cellulose (after seg. 3), which form a composite that surrounds the air spaces. This suggests that part of the polysaccharides present in cell walls are not degraded during the process, although specific enzymes have been detected that could act on polysaccharide mobilization, such as the GH17 family. Further, under pretreatment with water, it has been observed that cell wall saccharification was higher at segments 1 and 2. On the other hand, when most of the pectins and hemicelluloses are retrieved by pretreatment with NaOH, saccharification is higher of segments 2, 3 and 4, probably due to the higher access to the wall and also to the higher proportion of cellulose. The profiles related to the glycosil hydrolases found in this work, suggest that these enzymes attack the cell wall. Initially, they are probably kept within a group of cells that will originate the aerenchyma. At the end of the process, when there is cell lysis, the remaining walls of some cells are recalcitrant to hydrolysis probably due to changes in their architecture and composition. Our findings bring promising information that could be used in the future to improve efficiency of hydrolysis for cellulosic ethanol production from sugarcane (AU)

FAPESP's process: 10/17070-3 - DETERMINATION OF ENZYME DEGRADATION OF CELL WALL DURING FORMATION IN AERENCHYMA ROOTS OF SUGARCANE
Grantee:Adriana Grandis
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Doctorate