Abstract

Plants prevent dehydration by coating their aerial, primary organs with waxes. Wax compositions frequently differ between species, organs, and developmental stages, probably to balance limiting nonstomatal water loss with various other ecophysiological roles of surface waxes. To establish structure-function relationships, we quantified the composition and transpiration barrier properties of the gl1 mutant leaf waxes of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) to the necessary spatial resolution. The waxes coating the upper and lower leaf surfaces had distinct compositions. Moreover, within the adaxial wax, the epicuticular layer contained more wax and a higher relative quantity of alkanes, whereas the intracuticular wax had a higher percentage of alcohols. The wax formed a barrier against nonstomatal water loss, where the outer layer contributed twice as much resistance as the inner layer. Based on this detailed description of Arabidopsis leaf waxes, structure-function relationships can now be established by manipulating one cuticle component and assessing the effect on cuticle functions. Next, we ectopically expressed the triterpenoid synthase gene AtLUP4 (for lupeol synthase4 or β-amyrin synthase) to compare water loss with and without added cuticular triterpenoids in Arabidopsis leaf waxes. β-Amyrin accumulated solely in the intracuticular wax, constituting up to 4% of this wax layer, without other concomitant changes of wax composition. This triterpenoid accumulation caused a significant reduction in the water barrier effectiveness of the intracuticular wax.

Highlights

  • Plants prevent dehydration by coating their aerial, primary organs with waxes

  • Water Resistance of Arabidopsis Leaf Waxes understanding is mainly hampered by the fact that the previous investigations aimed at chemically and biologically characterizing the cuticles from different species, and searching for structure-function correlations based on species comparisons (Schreiber and Riederer, 1996)

  • Our results showed that b-amyrin accumulated solely in the intracuticular wax layer

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Summary

Introduction

Plants prevent dehydration by coating their aerial, primary organs with waxes. Wax compositions frequently differ between species, organs, and developmental stages, probably to balance limiting nonstomatal water loss with various other ecophysiological roles of surface waxes. Our. Water Resistance of Arabidopsis Leaf Waxes understanding is mainly hampered by the fact that the previous investigations aimed at chemically and biologically characterizing the cuticles from different species, and searching for structure-function correlations based on species comparisons (Schreiber and Riederer, 1996). Water Resistance of Arabidopsis Leaf Waxes understanding is mainly hampered by the fact that the previous investigations aimed at chemically and biologically characterizing the cuticles from different species, and searching for structure-function correlations based on species comparisons (Schreiber and Riederer, 1996) Such descriptive comparisons were necessarily confounded by the multitude of cuticle differences found between species, rather than just the one factor being assessed. To overcome this fundamental limitation, analyses of single species prior to and after modification of the wax composition are required

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