4.8 Article

Passive membrane transport of lignin-related compounds

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1904643116

关键词

molecular dynamics; lignin permeability; lignin biosynthesis; biological funneling; free energy calculation

资金

  1. US Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-AC36-08GO28308]
  2. NREL Director's Fellowship - Laboratory Directed Research and Development program
  3. DOE Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) Bioenergy Technologies Office
  4. DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center (DOE Office of Science) [DE-SC0018409]
  5. Research Foundation-Flanders [G020618N, G0C1914N]
  6. Center for Bioenergy Innovation, US DOE Bioenergy Research Center - Office of Biological and Environmental Research in the DOE Office of Science
  7. DOE EERE
  8. NSF at the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center [MCB090159, ACI-1445606]
  9. NSF [ACI-1548562]
  10. University of Texas at Austin in the Texas Advanced Computing Center [MCB090159]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Lignin is an abundant aromatic polymer found in plant secondary cell walls. In recent years, lignin has attracted renewed interest as a feedstock for bio-based chemicals via catalytic and biological approaches and has emerged as a target for genetic engineering to improve lignocellulose digestibility by altering its composition. In lignin biosynthesis and microbial conversion, small phenolic lignin precursors or degradation products cross membrane bilayers through an unidentified translocation mechanism prior to incorporation into lignin polymers (synthesis) or catabolism (bioconversion), with both passive and transporter-assisted mechanisms postulated. To test the passive permeation potential of these phenolics, we performed molecular dynamics simulations for 69 monomeric and dimeric lignin-related phenolics with 3 model membranes to determine the membrane partitioning and permeability coefficients for each compound. The results support an accessible passive permeation mechanism for most compounds, including monolignols, dimeric phenolics, and the flavonoid, tricin. Computed lignin partition coefficients are consistent with concentration enrichment near lipid carbonyl groups, and permeability coefficients are sufficient to keep pace with cellular metabolism. Interactions between methoxy and hydroxy groups are found to reduce membrane partitioning and improve permeability. Only carboxylate-modified or glycosylated lignin phenolics are predicted to require transporters for membrane translocation. Overall, the results suggest that most lignin-related compounds can passively traverse plant and microbial membranes on timescales commensurate with required biological activities, with any potential transport regulation mechanism in lignin synthesis, catabolism, or bioconversion requiring compound functionalization.

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