Abstract

Wood biomass is mainly made of secondary cell walls; hence, elucidation of the molecular mechanisms underlying the transcriptional regulation of secondary wall biosynthesis during wood formation will be instrumental to design strategies for genetic improvement of wood biomass. Here, we provide direct evidence demonstrating that the poplar (Populus trichocarpa) wood-associated NAC domain transcription factors (PtrWNDs) are master switches activating a suite of downstream transcription factors, and together, they are involved in the coordinated regulation of secondary wall biosynthesis during wood formation. We show that transgenic poplar plants with dominant repression of PtrWNDs functions exhibit a drastic reduction in secondary wall thickening in woody cells, and those with PtrWND overexpression result in ectopic deposition of secondary walls. Analysis of PtrWND2B overexpressors revealed up-regulation of the expression of a number of wood-associated transcription factors, the promoters of which were also activated by PtrWND6B and the Eucalyptus EgWND1. Transactivation analysis and electrophoretic mobility shift assay demonstrated that PtrWNDs and EgWND1 activated gene expression through direct binding to the secondary wall NAC-binding elements, which are present in the promoters of several wood-associated transcription factors and a number of genes involved in secondary wall biosynthesis and modification. The WND-regulated transcription factors PtrNAC150, PtrNAC156, PtrNAC157, PtrMYB18, PtrMYB74, PtrMYB75, PtrMYB121, PtrMYB128, PtrZF1, and PtrGATA8 were able to activate the promoter activities of the biosynthetic genes for all three major wood components. Our study has uncovered that the WND master switches together with a battery of their downstream transcription factors form a transcriptional network controlling secondary wall biosynthesis during wood formation.

Highlights

  • Wood biomass is mainly made of secondary cell walls; elucidation of the molecular mechanisms underlying the transcriptional regulation of secondary wall biosynthesis during wood formation will be instrumental to design strategies for genetic improvement of wood biomass

  • Our direct proof in transgenic poplar that PtrWNDs are master transcriptional switches controlling secondary wall biosynthesis during wood formation, together with our finding that they regulate a suite of downstream transcription factors implicated in wood formation, provide foundation knowledge for further elucidation of the transcriptional program controlling secondary wall biosynthesis during wood formation in tree species

  • We have demonstrated that PtrWNDs activate the expression of a suite of downstream transcription factors, including those that are close homologs of the Arabidopsis SND1 downstream transcription factors

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Summary

Introduction

Wood biomass is mainly made of secondary cell walls; elucidation of the molecular mechanisms underlying the transcriptional regulation of secondary wall biosynthesis during wood formation will be instrumental to design strategies for genetic improvement of wood biomass. We provide direct evidence demonstrating that the poplar (Populus trichocarpa) wood-associated NAC domain transcription factors (PtrWNDs) are master switches activating a suite of downstream transcription factors, and together, they are involved in the coordinated regulation of secondary wall biosynthesis during wood formation. Several other woodassociated transcription factors have been demonstrated to be transcriptional regulators of lignin biosynthesis (Patzlaff et al, 2003b; Legay et al, 2007; Bomal et al, 2008; Zhong and Ye, 2009) Based on these findings, it has been proposed that a transcriptional program encompassing WNDs and their downstream transcription factors is involved in the coordinated activation of secondary wall biosynthetic genes during wood formation (Zhong et al, 2010b). A direct proof demonstrating the existence of such a transcription program during wood formation in tree species is still lacking

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