Plants (Nov 2019)

The Suitability of Orthogonal Hosts to Study Plant Cell Wall Biosynthesis

  • Markus Pauly,
  • Niklas Gawenda,
  • Christine Wagner,
  • Patrick Fischbach,
  • Vicente Ramírez,
  • Ilka M. Axmann,
  • Cătălin Voiniciuc

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants8110516
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. 516

Abstract

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Plant cells are surrounded by an extracellular matrix that consists mainly of polysaccharides. Many molecular components involved in plant cell wall polymer synthesis have been identified, but it remains largely unknown how these molecular players function together to define the length and decoration pattern of a polysaccharide. Synthetic biology can be applied to answer questions beyond individual glycosyltransferases by reconstructing entire biosynthetic machineries required to produce a complete wall polysaccharide. Recently, this approach was successful in establishing the production of heteromannan from several plant species in an orthogonal host—a yeast—illuminating the role of an auxiliary protein in the biosynthetic process. In this review we evaluate to what extent a selection of organisms from three kingdoms of life (Bacteria, Fungi and Animalia) might be suitable for the synthesis of plant cell wall polysaccharides. By identifying their key attributes for glycoengineering as well as analyzing the glycosidic linkages of their native polymers, we present a valuable comparison of their key advantages and limitations for the production of different classes of plant polysaccharides.

Keywords