The Cell Surface (Dec 2019)

Extensin arabinoside chain length is modulated in elongating cotton fibre

  • Xiaoyuan Guo,
  • Bjørn Øst Hansen,
  • Svenning Rune Moeller,
  • Jesper Harholt,
  • Jozef Mravec,
  • William Willats,
  • Bent Larsen Petersen,
  • Peter Ulvskov

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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Cotton fibre provides a unicellular model system for studying cell expansion and secondary cell wall deposition. Mature cotton fibres are mainly composed of cellulose while the walls of developing fibre cells contain a variety of polysaccharides and proteoglycans required for cell expansion. This includes hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (HRGPs) comprising the subgroup, extensins. In this study, extensin occurrence in cotton fibres was assessed using carbohydrate immunomicroarrays, mass spectrometry and monosaccharide profiling. Extensin amounts in three species appeared to correlate with fibre quality. Fibre cell expression profiling of the four cotton cultivars, combined with extensin arabinoside chain length measurements during fibre development, demonstrated that arabinoside side-chain length is modulated during development. Implications and mechanisms of extensin side-chain length dynamics during development are discussed. Keywords: Cotton fibre, HRGP, Extensin arabinoside metabolism, Cotton fibre quality, Transcriptomics, CoMPP