The structure and interaction of polymers affects secondary cell wall banding patterns in Arabidopsis.
Sarah A PfaffEdward R WagnerDaniel J CosgrovePublished in: The Plant cell (2024)
Xylem tracheary elements synthesize patterned secondary cell walls (SCWs) to reinforce against the negative pressure of water transport. VASCULAR-RELATED NAC-DOMAIN7 (VND7) induces differentiation, accompanied by cellulose, xylan, and lignin deposition into banded domains. To investigate the effect of polymer biosynthesis mutations on SCW patterning, we developed a method to induce tracheary element transdifferentiation of isolated protoplasts, by transient transformation with VND7. Our data showed that proper xylan elongation is necessary for distinct cellulose bands, cellulose-xylan interactions are essential for coincident polymer patterns, and cellulose deposition is needed to override the intracellular organization that yields unique xylan patterns. These data indicate that a properly assembled cell wall network acts as a scaffold to direct polymer deposition into distinctly banded domains. We describe the transdifferentiation of protoplasts into tracheary elements, providing an avenue to study patterned SCW biosynthesis in a tissue-free environment and in various mutant backgrounds.