Frontiers in Plant Science (May 2012)
Recent advances on the post-translational modifications of EXTs and their roles in plant cell walls
Abstract
The genetic set up and the enzymes that define the O-glycosylation sites and transfer the activated sugars to the cell wall protein backbone have remained unknown for a long time. We are now beginning to see the emerging components of the molecular machinery that assembles these complex O-glycoproteins on the plant cell wall. Genes conferring the posttranslational modifications, i.e. proline hydroxylation and subsequent O-glycosylation, of the plant cell wall protein extensin subgroup have being recently identified. In this review we summarize the enzymes that define the O-glycosylation sites on the O-glycoproteins, i.e. the prolyl 4–hydroxylases (P4Hs), the glycosyltransferases that transfer arabinose units (named arabinosyltransferases, AraTs) and the one responsible for the transfer of a single galactose (galactosyltransferase, GalT) on the protein extensin backbones, and finally the EXT peroxidase-mediated crosslinking at the cell wall. We discuss the effect of posttranslational modification on the structure and function of extensins in the plant cell walls.
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