
GbEXPATR , a species‐specific expansin, enhances cotton fibre elongation through cell wall restructuring
Author(s) -
Li Yang,
Tu Lili,
Pettolino Filomena A,
Ji Shengmei,
Hao Juan,
Yuan Daojun,
Deng Fenglin,
Tan Jiafu,
Hu Haiyan,
Wang Qing,
Llewellyn Danny J.,
Zhang Xianlong
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
plant biotechnology journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.525
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1467-7652
pISSN - 1467-7644
DOI - 10.1111/pbi.12450
Subject(s) - expansin , gossypium barbadense , cell wall , secondary cell wall , biology , gene , gossypium hirsutum , cellulase , cellulose , polysaccharide , gene expression , botany , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry
Summary Cotton provides us the most important natural fibre. High fibre quality is the major goal of cotton breeding, and introducing genes conferring longer, finer and stronger fibre from G ossypium barbadense to G ossypium hirsutum is an important breeding strategy. We previously analysed the G. barbadense fibre development mechanism by gene expression profiling and found two homoeologous fibre‐specific α‐expansins from G. barbadense , Gb EXPA 2 and Gb EXPATR . Gb EXPA 2 (from the D T genome) is a classical α‐expansin, while its homoeolog, Gb EXPATR ( A T genome), encodes a truncated protein lacking the normal C‐terminal polysaccharide‐binding domain of other α‐expansins and is specifically expressed in G . barbadense . Silencing EXPA in G . hirsutum induced shorter fibres with thicker cell walls. Gb EXPA 2 overexpression in G . hirsutum had no effect on mature fibre length, but produced fibres with a slightly thicker wall and increased crystalline cellulose content. Interestingly, Gb EXPATR overexpression resulted in longer, finer and stronger fibres coupled with significantly thinner cell walls. The longer and thinner fibre was associated with lower expression of a number of secondary wall‐associated genes, especially chitinase‐like genes, and walls with lower cellulose levels but higher noncellulosic polysaccharides which advocated that a delay in the transition to secondary wall synthesis might be responsible for better fibre. In conclusion, we propose that α‐expansins play a critical role in fibre development by loosening the cell wall; furthermore, a truncated form, Gb EXPATR , has a more dramatic effect through reorganizing secondary wall synthesis and metabolism and should be a candidate gene for developing G. hirsutum cultivars with superior fibre quality.