A new calmodulin-binding protein expresses in the context of secondary cell wall biosynthesis and impacts biomass properties in populus

Raghuram Badmi, Raja S. Payyavula, Garima Bali, Hao Bo Guo, Sara S. Jawdy, Lee E. Gunter, Xiaohan Yang, Kimberly A. Winkeler, Cassandra Collins, William H. Rottmann, Kelsey Yee, Miguel Rodriguez, Robert W. Sykes, Stephen R. Decker, Mark F. Davis, Arthur J. Ragauskas, Gerald A. Tuskan, Udaya C. Kalluri

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

21 Scopus citations

Abstract

A greater understanding of biosynthesis, signaling and regulatory pathways involved in determining stem growth and secondary cell wall chemistry is important for enabling pathway engineering and genetic optimization of biomass properties. The present study describes a new functional role of PdIQD10, a Populus gene belonging to the IQ67-Domain1 family of IQD genes, in impacting biomass formation and chemistry. Expression studies showed that PdIQD10 has enhanced expression in developing xylem and tension-stressed tissues in Populus deltoides. Molecular dynamics simulation and yeast two-hybrid interaction experiments suggest interactions with two calmodulin proteins, CaM247 and CaM014, supporting the sequence-predicted functional role of the PdIQD10 as a calmodulin-binding protein. PdIQD10 was found to interact with specific Populus isoforms of the Kinesin Light Chain protein family, shown previously to function as microtubule-guided, cargo binding and delivery proteins in Arabidopsis. Subcellular localization studies showed that PdIQD10 localizes in the nucleus and plasma membrane regions. Promoter-binding assays suggest that a known master transcriptional regulator of secondary cell wall biosynthesis (PdWND1B) may be upstream of an HD-ZIP III gene that is in turn upstream of PdIQD10 gene in the transcriptional network. RNAi-mediated downregulation of PdIQD10 expression resulted in plants with altered biomass properties including higher cellulose, wall glucose content and greater biomass quantity. These results present evidence in support of a new functional role for an IQD gene family member, PdIQD10, in secondary cell wall biosynthesis and biomass formation in Populus.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1669
JournalFrontiers in Plant Science
Volume871
DOIs
StatePublished - 2018

Funding

The authors wish to thank Zack Moore for assistance with plant care and propagation of materials employed in the greenhouse experiments. Oak Ridge National Laboratory is managed by UT-Battelle, LLC, for the U.S. Department of Energy under contract DEAC05-00OR22725. Funding. The work was supported by U.S DOE BioEnergy Science Center and the Center for Bioenergy Innovation. The BioEnergy Science Center and the Center for Bioenergy Innovation are US Department of Energy Bioenergy Research Centers, supported by the Office of Biological and Environmental Research in the Department of Energy’s Office of Science. The funding body has no role in the design of the study and collection, analysis, and interpretation of data and in writing the manuscript.

FundersFunder number
U.S. Department of EnergyDEAC05-00OR22725

    Keywords

    • Biomass
    • Calcium-calmodulin
    • Cellulose
    • IQD
    • Kinesin
    • Populus
    • Secondary cell wall
    • Signaling

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