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Peroxidases Bound to the Growing Lignin Polymer Produce Natural Like Extracellular Lignin in a Cell Culture of Norway Spruce. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Lignin is a critical plant cell wall component formed through the oxidation of monolignols via enzymes, with its structure influenced by the ratios of monolignols and polymer radicals in the reaction.
  • The study explores how different oxidative enzymes affect lignin polymerization, using techniques like NMR to analyze the resulting structures and demonstrating that the high oxidation rate of lignin contributes to a more natural structure.
  • In Norway spruce cell cultures, specific peroxidases are identified as key players in lignin production, showing strong binding to lignin polymers and facilitating the incorporation of various cell wall compounds like pectin-type sugars.

Article Abstract

Lignin, an important component of plant cell walls, is a polymer of monolignols derived from the phenylpropanoid pathway. Monolignols are oxidized in the cell wall by oxidative enzymes (peroxidases and/or laccases) to radicals, which then couple with the growing lignin polymer. We have investigated the characteristics of the polymerization reaction by producing lignin polymers using different oxidative enzymes and analyzing the structures formed with NMR. The ability of the enzymes to oxidize high-molecular-weight compounds was tested using cytochrome as a substrate. The results support an idea that lignin structure is largely determined by the concentration ratios of the monolignol (coniferyl alcohol) and polymer radicals involved in the coupling reaction. High rate of the lignin polymer oxidation compared to monolignol oxidation leads to a natural-like structure. The high relative rate can be achieved by an open active site of the oxidative enzyme, close proximity of the enzyme with the polymeric substrate or simply by high enzymatic activity that consumes monolignols rapidly. Monolignols, which are oxidized efficiently, can be seen as competitive inhibitors of polymer oxidation. Our results indicate that, at least in a Norway spruce ( L. Karst.) cell culture, a group of apoplastic, polymer-oxidizing peroxidases bind to the lignin polymer and are responsible for production of natural-like lignin in cell suspension cultures , and also . The peroxidases bound to the extracellular lignin had the highest ability to bind to various cell wall polymers . Extracellular lignin contains pectin-type sugars, making them possible attachment points for these cationic peroxidases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5067304PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2016.01523DOI Listing

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