Unravelling Chemical Composition of Agave Spines: News from Agave fourcroydes Lem.
Dalia C Morán-VelázquezJuan Luis Monribot VillanuevaMatthieu BourdonJohn Z TangItzel López-RosasLuis F Maceda-LópezJosé L Villalpando-AguilarLorena Rodríguez-LópezAdrien GauthierLaura TrejoParastoo AzadiFrancisco VilaplanaJosé Antonio Guerrero-AnalcoFulgencio Alatorre-CobosPublished in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2020)
Spines are key plant modifications developed to deal against herbivores; however, its physical structure and chemical composition have been little explored in plant species. Here, we took advantage of high-throughput chromatography to characterize chemical composition of Agave fourcroydes Lem. spines, a species traditionally used for fiber extraction. Analyses of structural carbohydrate showed that spines have lower cellulose content than leaf fibers (52 and 72%, respectively) but contain more than 2-fold the hemicellulose and 1.5-fold pectin. Xylose and galacturonic acid were enriched in spines compared to fibers. The total lignin content in spines was 1.5-fold higher than those found in fibers, with elevated levels of syringyl (S) and guaiacyl (G) subunits but similar S/G ratios within tissues. Metabolomic profiling based on accurate mass spectrometry revealed the presence of phenolic compounds including quercetin, kaempferol, (+)-catechin, and (-)-epicatechin in A. fourcroydes spines, which were also detected in situ in spines tissues and could be implicated in the color of these plants' structures. Abundance of (+)-catechins could also explain proanthocyanidins found in spines. Agave spines may become a plant model to obtain more insights about cellulose and lignin interactions and condensed tannin deposition, which is valuable knowledge for the bioenergy industry and development of naturally dyed fibers, respectively.