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      Lignin biosynthesis: old roads revisited and new roads explored

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          Abstract

          Lignin is a major component of secondarily thickened plant cell walls and is considered to be the second most abundant biopolymer on the planet. At one point believed to be the product of a highly controlled polymerization procedure involving just three potential monomeric components (monolignols), it is becoming increasingly clear that the composition of lignin is quite flexible. Furthermore, the biosynthetic pathways to the major monolignols also appear to exhibit flexibility, particularly as regards the early reactions leading to the formation of caffeic acid from coumaric acid. The operation of parallel pathways to caffeic acid occurring at the level of shikimate esters or free acids may help provide robustness to the pathway under different physiological conditions. Several features of the pathway also appear to link monolignol biosynthesis to both generation and detoxification of hydrogen peroxide, one of the oxidants responsible for creating monolignol radicals for polymerization in the apoplast. Monolignol transport to the apoplast is not well understood. It may involve passive diffusion, although this may be targeted to sites of lignin initiation/polymerization by ordered complexes of both biosynthetic enzymes on the cytosolic side of the plasma membrane and structural anchoring of proteins for monolignol oxidation and polymerization on the apoplastic side. We present several hypothetical models to illustrate these ideas and stimulate further research. These are based primarily on studies in model systems, which may or may not reflect the major lignification process in forest trees.

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          Stress-Induced Phenylpropanoid Metabolism

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            Abiotic and biotic stresses and changes in the lignin content and composition in plants.

            Lignin is a polymer of phenylpropanoid compounds formed through a complex biosynthesis route, represented by a metabolic grid for which most of the genes involved have been sequenced in several plants, mainly in the model-plants Arabidopsis thaliana and Populus. Plants are exposed to different stresses, which may change lignin content and composition. In many cases, particularly for plant-microbe interactions, this has been suggested as defence responses of plants to the stress. Thus, understanding how a stressor modulates expression of the genes related with lignin biosynthesis may allow us to develop study-models to increase our knowledge on the metabolic control of lignin deposition in the cell wall. This review focuses on recent literature reporting on the main types of abiotic and biotic stresses that alter the biosynthesis of lignin in plants.
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              The origin and evolution of lignin biosynthesis.

              Lignin, a phenolic polymer derived mainly from hydroxycinnamyl alcohols, is ubiquitously present in tracheophytes. The development of lignin biosynthesis has been considered to be one of the key factors that allowed land plants to flourish in terrestrial ecosystems. Lignin provides structural rigidity for tracheophytes to stand upright, and strengthens the cell wall of their water-conducting tracheary elements to withstand the negative pressure generated during transpiration. In this review, we discuss a number of aspects regarding the origin and evolution of lignin biosynthesis during land plant evolution, including the establishment of its monomer biosynthetic scaffold, potential precursors to the lignin polymer, as well as the emergence of the polymerization machinery and regulatory system. The accumulated knowledge on the topic, as summarized here, provides us with an evolutionary view on how this complex metabolic system emerged and developed.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Open Biol
                Open Biol
                RSOB
                royopenbio
                Open Biology
                The Royal Society
                2046-2441
                December 2019
                4 December 2019
                4 December 2019
                : 9
                : 12
                : 190215
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Hagler Institute for Advanced Studies and Department of Biological Sciences, Texas A&M University , College Station, TX, USA
                [2 ]BioDiscovery Institute and Department of Biological Sciences, University of North Texas , 1155 Union Circle #311428, Denton, TX 76203-5017, USA
                Author notes
                [†]

                An invited perspective to mark the election of the author to the fellowship of the Royal Society in 2018.

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8393-9408
                Article
                rsob190215
                10.1098/rsob.190215
                6936255
                31795915
                bc2320cb-4e73-4dc4-b1fb-55eab399a20c
                © 2019 The Authors.

                Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 7 September 2019
                : 30 October 2019
                Funding
                Funded by: US National Science Foundation (Integrated Organismal Systems);
                Award ID: 1456286
                Funded by: US Department of Energy;
                Award ID: Center for Bioenergy Innovation
                Categories
                15
                31
                129
                Perspective
                Custom metadata
                December 2019

                Life sciences
                lignin,secondary cell wall,metabolic channelling,membrane transport,oxidative polymerization,reactive oxygen species

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