Abstract

BackgroundWe previously developed several strategies to engineer plants to produce cost-efficient biofuels from plant biomass. Engineered Arabidopsis plants with low xylan and lignin content showed normal growth and improved saccharification efficiency under standard growth conditions. However, it remains to be determined whether these engineered plants perform well under drought stress, which is the primary source of abiotic stress in the field.ResultsUpon exposing engineered Arabidopsis plants to severe drought, we observed better survival rates in those with a low degree of xylan acetylation, low lignin, and low xylan content compared to those in wild-type plants. Increased pectic galactan content had no effect on drought tolerance. The drought-tolerant plants exhibited low water loss from leaves, and drought-responsive genes (RD29A, RD29B, DREB2A) were generally up-regulated under drought stress, which did not occur in the well-watered state. When compared with the wild type, plants with low lignin due to expression of QsuB, a 3-dehydroshikimate dehydratase, showed a stronger response to abscisic acid (ABA) in assays for seed germination and stomatal closure. The low-lignin plants also accumulated more ABA in response to drought than the wild-type plants. On the contrary, the drought tolerance in the engineered plants with low xylan content and low xylan acetylation was not associated with differences in ABA content or response compared to the wild type. Surprisingly, we found a significant increase in galactose levels and sugar released from the low xylan-engineered plants under drought stress.ConclusionsThis study shows that plants engineered to accumulate less lignin or xylan are more tolerant to drought and activate drought responses faster than control plants. This is an important finding because it demonstrates that modification of secondary cell walls does not necessarily render the plants less robust in the environment, and it shows that substantial changes in biomass composition can be achieved without compromising plant resilience.

Highlights

  • We previously developed several strategies to engineer plants to produce cost-efficient biofuels from plant biomass

  • We found that the plants engineered for low lignin content confer the adaptation to drought tolerance by more rapidly elevating abscisic acid (ABA) levels and positively regulating the expression of drought-responsive genes

  • The survival rate of X4#2 and X4#12 lines, which combine low lignin and low xylan, reached 80% (Fig. 1). This showed that the engineered plants with low xylan, low lignin, and a low acetyl substitution degree of xylan were more drought-tolerant than wild-type and W2#5 plants

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Summary

Introduction

We previously developed several strategies to engineer plants to produce cost-efficient biofuels from plant biomass. Engineered Arabidopsis plants with low xylan and lignin content showed normal growth and improved saccharification efficiency under standard growth conditions. It remains to be determined whether these engineered plants perform well under drought stress, which is the primary source of abiotic stress in the field. In a recent study we reported that expression of a 3-dehydroshikimate dehydratase (QsuB from Corynebacterium glutamicum), driven by a C4H promoter, results in dramatically reduced lignin content and improved saccharification efficiency without impacting plant growth [22]. Simultaneous overexpression of AtUGE2 (UDP-glucose epimerase) and GALS1 increases the stem cell wall galactose content, providing a promising method of engineering advanced feedstocks for biofuel [10].

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