Morphology, sucrose metabolism and gene network reveal the molecular mechanism of seed fiber development in poplar

Poplar is an important tree species for ecological protection, wood production, bioenergy and urban greening; it has been widely planted worldwide. However, the catkin fibers produced by female poplars can cause environmental pollution and safety hazards during spring. This study focused on Populus...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of biological macromolecules 2023-08, Vol.246, p.125633-125633, Article 125633
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Xiong, Zhao, Tianyun, Rao, Pian, Yang, Ning, Li, Guolei, Jia, Liming, An, Xinmin, Chen, Zhong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Poplar is an important tree species for ecological protection, wood production, bioenergy and urban greening; it has been widely planted worldwide. However, the catkin fibers produced by female poplars can cause environmental pollution and safety hazards during spring. This study focused on Populus tomentosa, and revealed the sucrose metabolism regulatory mechanism of catkin fibers development from morphological, physiological and molecular aspects. Paraffin section suggested that poplar catkin fibers were not seed hairs and produced from the epidermal cells of funicle and placenta. Sucrose degradation via invertase and sucrose synthase played the dominant role during poplar catkin fibers development. The expression patterns revealed that sucrose metabolism-related genes played important roles during catkin fibers development. Y1H analysis indicated that there was a potential interaction between sucrose synthase 2 (PtoSUS2)/vacuolar invertase 3 (PtoVIN3) and trichome-regulating MYB transcription factors in poplar. Finally, the two key genes, PtoSUS2 and PtoVIN3, had roles in Arabidopsis trichome density, indicating that sucrose metabolism is important in poplar catkin fibers development. This study is not only helpful for clarifying the mechanism of sucrose regulation during trichome development in perennial woody plants, but also establishes a foundation to solve poplar catkin fibers pollution through genetic engineering methods. •Poplar catkin fibers produced from the epidermal cells of funicle and placenta.•Sucrose degradation played the dominant role during poplar catkin fibers development.•PtoSUS2 and PtoVIN3 had a potential interaction with trichome-regulating MYB transcription factors in poplar.•Over-expression of PtoSUS2 or PtoVIN3 could increase the trichome density in Arabidopsis.
ISSN:0141-8130
1879-0003
DOI:10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.125633