4.8 Article

XAX1 from glycosyltransferase family 61 mediates xylosyltransfer to rice xylan

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1202079109

Keywords

bioenergy; plant cell wall; type II cell walls; arabinoxylan

Funding

  1. Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research, of the Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  2. National Science Foundation Collaborative Research and Education in Agricultural Technologies and Engineering-Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (CREATE-IGERT) [NSF DGE-0653984]
  3. Villum-Kann Rasmussen grant
  4. Danish Research Council [FTP-09-066624]
  5. Villum Foundation

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Xylan is the second most abundant polysaccharide on Earth and represents an immense quantity of stored energy for biofuel production. Despite its importance, most of the enzymes that synthesize xylan have yet to be identified. Xylans have a backbone of beta-1,4-linked xylose residues with substitutions that include alpha-(1 -> 2)-linked glucuronosyl, 4-O-methyl glucuronosyl, and alpha-1,2- and alpha-1,3-arabinofuranosyl residues. The substitutions are structurally diverse and vary by taxonomy, with grass xylan representing a unique composition distinct from dicots and other monocots. To date, no enzyme has yet been identified that is specific to grass xylan synthesis. We identified a xylose-deficient loss-of-function rice mutant in Os02g22380, a putative glycosyltransferase in a grass-specific subfamily of family GT61. We designate the mutant xax1 for xylosyl arabinosyl substitution of xylan 1. Enzymatic fingerprinting of xylan showed the specific absence in the mutant of a peak, which was isolated and determined by H-1-NMR to be (beta-1,4-Xyl)(4) with a beta-Xylp-(1 -> 2)-alpha-Araf-(1 -> 3). Rice xax1 mutant plants are deficient in ferulic and coumaric acid, aromatic compounds known to be attached to arabinosyl residues in xylan substituted with xylosyl residues. The xax1 mutant plants exhibit an increased extractability of xylan and increased saccharification, probably reflecting a lower degree of diferulic cross-links. Activity assays with microsomes isolated from tobacco plants transiently expressing XAX1 demonstrated xylosyltransferase activity onto endogenous acceptors. Our results provide insight into grass xylan synthesis and how substitutions may be modified for increased saccharification for biofuel generation.

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