Effects of Coumarate 3-Hydroxylase Down-regulation on Lignin Structure

John Ralph(United States Department of Agriculture), Takuya Akiyama(U.S. Dairy Forage Research Center), Hoon Kim(United States Department of Agriculture), Fachuang Lu(University of Wisconsin–Madison), Paul F. Schatz(United States Department of Agriculture), Jane M. Marita(United States Department of Agriculture), Sally A. Ralph(Forest Products Laboratory), M. S. Srinivasa Reddy(Noble Research Institute), Fang Chen(Noble Research Institute), Richard A. Dixon(Noble Research Institute)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
January 19, 2006
Cited by 240Open Access
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Abstract

Down-regulation of the gene encoding 4-coumarate 3-hydroxylase (C3H) in alfalfa massively but predictably increased the proportion of p-hydroxyphenyl (P) units relative to the normally dominant guaiacyl (G) and syringyl (S) units. Stem levels of up to approximately 65% P (from wild-type levels of approximately 1%) resulting from down-regulation of C3H were measured by traditional degradative analyses as well as two-dimensional 13C-1H correlative NMR methods. Such levels put these transgenics well beyond the P:G:S compositional bounds of normal plants; p-hydroxyphenyl levels are reported to reach a maximum of 30% in gymnosperm severe compression wood zones but are limited to a few percent in dicots. NMR also revealed structural differences in the interunit linkage distribution that characterizes a lignin polymer. Lower levels of key beta-aryl ether units were relatively augmented by higher levels of phenylcoumarans and resinols. The C3H-deficient alfalfa lignins were devoid of beta-1 coupling products, highlighting the significant differences in the reaction course for p-coumaryl alcohol versus the two normally dominant monolignols, coniferyl and sinapyl alcohols. A larger range of dibenzodioxocin structures was evident in conjunction with an approximate doubling of their proportion. The nature of each of the structural units was revealed by long range 13C-1H correlation experiments. For example, although beta-ethers resulted from the coupling of all three monolignols with the growing polymer, phenylcoumarans were formed almost solely from coupling reactions involving p-coumaryl alcohol; they resulted from both coniferyl and sinapyl alcohol in the wild-type plants. Such structural differences form a basis for explaining differences in digestibility and pulping performance of C3H-deficient plants.


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