Cellulose synthesis and cell expansion are regulated by different mechanisms in growing Arabidopsis hypocotyls
Date
2017
Authors
Ivakov, Alexander
Flis, Anna
Apelt, Federico
Fünfgeld, Maximillian
Scherer, Ulrike
Stitt, Mark
Kragler, Friedrich
Vissenberg, Kris
Persson, Staffan
Suslov, Dmitry
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American Society of Plant Biologists
Abstract
Plant growth is sustained by two complementary processes – biomass biosynthesis and cell expansion. The cell wall is crucial to both as it forms the majority of biomass, while its extensibility limits cell expansion. Cellulose is a major component of the cell wall and cellulose synthesis is pivotal to plant cell growth and its regulation is poorly understood. Using periodic diurnal variation in Arabidopsis thaliana hypocotyl growth, we found that cellulose synthesis and cell expansion can be uncoupled and are regulated by different mechanisms. We grew Arabidopsis plants in very short photoperiods and used a combination of extended nights, continuous light, sucrose feeding experiments and photosynthesis inhibition to tease apart the influences of light, metabolic and circadian clock signaling on rates of cellulose biosynthesis and cell wall biomechanics. We demonstrate that cell expansion is regulated by protein-mediated changes in cell wall extensibility driven by the circadian clock. By contrast, the biosynthesis of cellulose is controlled through intracellular trafficking of cellulose-synthase enzyme complexes regulated exclusively by metabolic signaling related to the carbon status of the plant, and independently of the circadian clock or light signaling.
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The Plant Cell
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Journal article
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2099-12-31
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