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The Arabidopsis mutant Atomt1 lignin differs from native lignin in wild type plants, in terms of sinapyl (S) alcohol-derived substructures in fiber cell walls being substituted by 5-hydroxyconiferyl alcohol (5OHG)-derived moieties. During programmed lignin assembly, these engender formation of benzodioxane substructures due to intramolecular cyclization of their quinone methides that are transiently formed following 8-O-4' radical-radical coupling. Thioacidolytic cleavage of the 8-O-4' inter-unit linkages in the Atomt1 mutant, relative to the wild type, indicated that cleavable sinapyl (S) and coniferyl (G) alcohol-derived monomeric moieties were stoichiometrically reduced by a circa 2 : 1 ratio. Additionally, lignin degradative analysis resulted in release of a 5OHG-5OHG-G trimer from the Atomt1 mutant, which then underwent further cleavage. Significantly, the trimeric moiety released provides new insight into lignin primary structure: during polymer assembly, the first 5OHG moiety is linked via a C8-O-X inter-unit linkage, whereas subsequent addition of monomers apparently involves sequential addition of 5OHG and G moieties to the growing chain in a 2 : 1 overall stoichiometry. This quantification data thus provides further insight into how inter-unit linkage frequencies in native lignins are apparently conserved (or near conserved) during assembly in both instances, as well as providing additional impetus to resolve how the overall question of lignin macromolecular assembly is controlled in terms of both type of monomer addition and primary sequence.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c004817h | DOI Listing |
J Colloid Interface Sci
August 2025
School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Guangdong Provincial Key Lab of Green Chemical Product Technology, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510641, Guangdong, China. Electronic address:
Lignin is the primary renewable source of aromatic compounds in nature, and efficiently valorizing lignin can potentially help address the conflict between energy resources supply and demand. Electrochemical oxidation, when combined with extra oxidizing mediums, would be considered as a more powerful and environmentally friendly tool for lignin depolymerization. However, possible mechanisms of these combined oxidation processes lack to be fully elucidated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenes (Basel)
August 2025
College of Life Sciences, Yan'an University, Yan'an 716000, China.
The () gene family is pivotal for lignin polymerization and stress adaptation in plants, yet its systematic characterization in (), a critical bioenergy crop, remains underexplored. Leveraging the genome database, we conducted a genome-wide identification, phylogenetic classification, and expression profiling of the gene family. Evolutionary dynamics, gene structure variations, promoter cis-regulatory elements, and spatiotemporal transcriptome patterns were analyzed using bioinformatics and experimental validation (RT-qPCR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Bot
August 2025
Umeå Plant Science Centre, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Genetics and Plant Physiology, 901 83 Umeå, Sweden.
Xylem cells are surrounded by primary and secondary cell walls. Formation of primary walls is regulated by the cell wall integrity surveillance system, but it is unclear if the deposition of secondary walls is similarly regulated. To study this question, we introduced to aspen three different enzymes cleaving cell wall-localized xylan and we suppressed xylan synthase components either ubiquitously or specifically during secondary wall formation using Populus trichocarpa GT43B promoter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Physiol
September 2025
Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Plants produce diverse and abundant natural products that are critical for plant adaptation and human society. While tremendous diversification of plant natural product pathways is well documented, how the upstream primary metabolism evolved in coordination with lineage-specific pathways remains poorly understood. Here, we studied the evolution of aromatic amino acid (AAA) biosynthesis during the emergence of the tyrosine-derived lignin pathway uniquely found in grasses and closely related Poales.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Biotechnol J
August 2025
Department of Forest Genetics and Plant Physiology, Umeå Plant Science Centre, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Umeå, Sweden.
Wood is the most abundant renewable natural resource composed of different polysaccharides and lignin, but its utilisation is hampered by intermolecular linkages between these components forming lignin-carbohydrate complexes (LCCs) causing recalcitrance. The links between glucuronoxylan and the γ-C of lignin (γ-ester linkages) are thought to contribute to one-third of LCCs, but direct evidence for their natural occurrence and their role in recalcitrance has been scarce so far. To address these issues, Phanerochaete carnosa glucuronoyl esterase (PcGCE), hydrolysing γ-ester linkages, was expressed in cell walls of developing wood in hybrid aspen (Populus tremula L.
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