Planta 2009-05-01

Grass lignin acylation: p-coumaroyl transferase activity and cell wall characteristics of C3 and C4 grasses.

Ronald D Hatfield, Jane M Marita, Kenneth Frost, John Grabber, John Ralph, Fachuang Lu, Hoon Kim

Index: Planta 229(6) , 1253-1267, (2009)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Grasses are a predominant source of nutritional energy for livestock systems around the world. Grasses with high lignin content have lower energy conversion efficiencies for production of bioenergy either in the form of ethanol or to milk and meat through ruminants. Grass lignins are uniquely acylated with p-coumarates (pCA), resulting from the incorporation of monolignol p-coumarate conjugates into the growing lignin polymer within the cell wall matrix. The required acyl-transferase is a soluble enzyme (p-coumaroyl transferase, pCAT) that utilizes p-coumaroyl-CoenzymeA (pCA-CoA) as the activated donor molecule and sinapyl alcohol as the preferred acceptor molecule. Grasses (C3and C4) were evaluated for cell wall characteristics; pCA, lignin, pCAT activity, and neutral sugar composition. All C3 and C4 grasses had measurable pCAT activity, however the pCAT activities did not follow the same pattern as the pCA incorporation into lignin as expected.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

The effect of light on gene expression and podophyllotoxin biosynthesis in Linum album cell culture.

2012-07-01

[Plant Physiol. Biochem. 56 , 41-6, (2012)]

Effect of heat treatment on lignification of postharvest bamboo shoots (Phyllostachys praecox f. prevernalis.).

2012-12-15

[Food Chem. 135 , 2182-7, (2012)]

The effect of proteinases on phenylalanine ammonia-lyase from the yeast Rhodotorula glutinis.

1981-12-01

[Biochem. J. 199 , 715–723, (1981)]

Fate of residual lignin during delignification of kraft pulp by trametes versicolor

1998-06-01

[Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 64(6) , 2117-2125, (1998)]

More Articles...