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Featured researches published by Ajaya K. Biswal.


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2015

Downregulation of GAUT12 in Populus deltoides by RNA silencing results in reduced recalcitrance, increased growth and reduced xylan and pectin in a woody biofuel feedstock

Ajaya K. Biswal; Zhangying Hao; Sivakumar Pattathil; Xiaohan Yang; Kim Winkeler; Cassandra Collins; Sushree S. Mohanty; Elizabeth A. Richardson; Ivana Gelineo-Albersheim; Kimberly Hunt; David Ryno; Robert W. Sykes; Geoffrey B. Turner; Angela Ziebell; Erica Gjersing; Wolfgang Lukowitz; Mark F. Davis; Stephen R. Decker; Michael G. Hahn; Debra Mohnen

BackgroundThe inherent recalcitrance of woody bioenergy feedstocks is a major challenge for their use as a source of second-generation biofuel. Secondary cell walls that constitute the majority of hardwood biomass are rich in cellulose, xylan, and lignin. The interactions among these polymers prevent facile accessibility and deconstruction by enzymes and chemicals. Plant biomass that can with minimal pretreatment be degraded into sugars is required to produce renewable biofuels in a cost-effective manner.ResultsGAUT12/IRX8 is a putative glycosyltransferase proposed to be involved in secondary cell wall glucuronoxylan and/or pectin biosynthesis based on concomitant reductions of both xylan and the pectin homogalacturonan (HG) in Arabidopsis irx8 mutants. Two GAUT12 homologs exist in Populus trichocarpa, PtGAUT12.1 and PtGAUT12.2. Knockdown expression of both genes simultaneously has been shown to reduce xylan content in Populus wood. We tested the proposition that RNA interference (RNAi) downregulation of GAUT12.1 alone would lead to increased sugar release in Populus wood, that is, reduced recalcitrance, based on the hypothesis that GAUT12 synthesizes a wall structure required for deposition of xylan and that cell walls with less xylan and/or modified cell wall architecture would have reduced recalcitrance. Using an RNAi approach, we generated 11 Populus deltoides transgenic lines with 50 to 67% reduced PdGAUT12.1 transcript expression compared to wild type (WT) and vector controls. Ten of the eleven RNAi lines yielded 4 to 8% greater glucose release upon enzymatic saccharification than the controls. The PdGAUT12.1 knockdown (PdGAUT12.1-KD) lines also displayed 12 to 52% and 12 to 44% increased plant height and radial stem diameter, respectively, compared to the controls. Knockdown of PdGAUT12.1 resulted in a 25 to 47% reduction in galacturonic acid and 17 to 30% reduction in xylose without affecting total lignin content, revealing that in Populus wood as in Arabidopsis, GAUT12 affects both pectin and xylan formation. Analyses of the sugars present in sequential cell wall extracts revealed a reduction of glucuronoxylan and pectic HG and rhamnogalacturonan in extracts from PdGAUT12.1-KD lines.ConclusionsThe results show that downregulation of GAUT12.1 leads to a reduction in a population of xylan and pectin during wood formation and to reduced recalcitrance, more easily extractable cell walls, and increased growth in Populus.


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2014

Aspen pectate lyase PtxtPL1-27 mobilizes matrix polysaccharides from woody tissues and improves saccharification yield

Ajaya K. Biswal; Kazuo Soeno; Madhavi Latha Gandla; Peter Immerzeel; Sivakumar Pattathil; Jessica Lucenius; Ritva Serimaa; Michael G. Hahn; Thomas Moritz; Leif J. Jönsson; Maria Israelsson-Nordström; Ewa J. Mellerowicz

BackgroundWood cell walls are rich in cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin. Hence, they are important sources of renewable biomass for producing energy and green chemicals. However, extracting desired constituents from wood efficiently poses significant challenges because these polymers are highly cross-linked in cell walls and are not easily accessible to enzymes and chemicals.ResultsWe show that aspen pectate lyase PL1-27, which degrades homogalacturonan and is expressed at the onset of secondary wall formation, can increase the solubility of wood matrix polysaccharides. Overexpression of this enzyme in aspen increased solubility of not only pectins but also xylans and other hemicelluloses, indicating that homogalacturonan limits the solubility of major wood cell wall components. Enzymatic saccharification of wood obtained from PL1-27-overexpressing trees gave higher yields of pentoses and hexoses than similar treatment of wood from wild-type trees, even after acid pretreatment.ConclusionsThus, the modification of pectins may constitute an important biotechnological target for improved wood processing despite their low abundance in woody biomass.


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2014

Deletion of a gene cluster encoding pectin degrading enzymes in Caldicellulosiruptor bescii reveals an important role for pectin in plant biomass recalcitrance

Daehwan Chung; Sivakumar Pattathil; Ajaya K. Biswal; Michael G. Hahn; Debra Mohnen; Janet Westpheling

BackgroundA major obstacle, and perhaps the most important economic barrier to the effective use of plant biomass for the production of fuels, chemicals, and bioproducts, is our current lack of knowledge of how to efficiently and effectively deconstruct wall polymers for their subsequent use as feedstocks. Plants represent the most desired source of renewable energy and hydrocarbons because they fix CO2, making their use carbon neutral. Their biomass structure, however, is a barrier to deconstruction, and this is often referred to as recalcitrance. Members of the bacterial genus Caldicellulosiruptor have the ability to grow on unpretreated plant biomass and thus provide an assay for plant deconstruction and biomass recalcitrance.ResultsUsing recently developed genetic tools for manipulation of these bacteria, a deletion of a gene cluster encoding enzymes for pectin degradation was constructed, and the resulting mutant was reduced in its ability to grow on both dicot and grass biomass, but not on soluble sugars. The plant biomass from three phylogenetically diverse plants, Arabidopsis (a herbaceous dicot), switchgrass (a monocot grass), and poplar (a woody dicot), was used in these analyses. These biomass types have cell walls that are significantly different from each other in both structure and composition. While pectin is a relatively minor component of the grass and woody dicot substrates, the reduced growth of the mutant on all three biomass types provides direct evidence that pectin plays an important role in biomass recalcitrance. Glycome profiling of the plant material remaining after growth of the mutant on Arabidopsis biomass compared to the wild-type revealed differences in the rhamnogalacturonan I, homogalacturonan, arabinogalactan, and xylan profiles. In contrast, only minor differences were observed in the glycome profiles of the switchgrass and poplar biomass.ConclusionsThe combination of microbial digestion and plant biomass analysis provides a new and important platform to identify plant wall structures whose presence reduces the ability of microbes to deconstruct plant walls and to identify enzymes that specifically deconstruct those structures.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2017

Transgenic switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) targeted for reduced recalcitrance to bioconversion: a 2-year comparative analysis of field-grown lines modified for target gene or genetic element expression

Alexandru Dumitrache; Jace Natzke; Miguel Rodriguez; Kelsey L. Yee; Olivia A. Thompson; Charleson R. Poovaiah; Hui Shen; Mitra Mazarei; Holly L. Baxter; Chunxiang Fu; Zeng-Yu Wang; Ajaya K. Biswal; Guifen Li; Avinash C. Srivastava; Yuhong Tang; Charles Neal Stewart; Richard A. Dixon; Richard S. Nelson; Debra Mohnen; Jonathan R. Mielenz; Steven D. Brown; Brian H. Davison

Summary Transgenic Panicum virgatum L. silencing (KD) or overexpressing (OE) specific genes or a small RNA (GAUT4‐KD, miRNA156‐OE, MYB4‐OE,COMT‐KD and FPGS‐KD) was grown in the field and aerial tissue analysed for biofuel production traits. Clones representing independent transgenic lines were established and senesced tissue was sampled after year 1 and 2 growth cycles. Biomass was analysed for wall sugars, recalcitrance to enzymatic digestibility and biofuel production using separate hydrolysis and fermentation. No correlation was found between plant carbohydrate content and biofuel production pointing to overriding structural and compositional elements that influence recalcitrance. Biomass yields were greater for all lines in the second year as plants establish in the field and standard amounts of biomass analysed from each line had more glucan, xylan and less ethanol (g/g basis) in the second‐ versus the first‐year samples, pointing to a broad increase in tissue recalcitrance after regrowth from the perennial root. However, biomass from second‐year growth of transgenics targeted for wall modification, GAUT4‐KD,MYB4‐OE,COMT‐KD and FPGS‐KD, had increased carbohydrate and ethanol yields (up to 12% and 21%, respectively) compared with control samples. The parental plant lines were found to have a significant impact on recalcitrance which can be exploited in future strategies. This summarizes progress towards generating next‐generation bio‐feedstocks with improved properties for microbial and enzymatic deconstruction, while providing a comprehensive quantitative analysis for the bioconversion of multiple plant lines in five transgenic strategies.


Nature Biotechnology | 2018

Sugar release and growth of biofuel crops are improved by downregulation of pectin biosynthesis

Ajaya K. Biswal; Melani A. Atmodjo; Mi Li; Holly L. Baxter; Chang Geun Yoo; Yunqiao Pu; Yi-Ching Lee; Mitra Mazarei; Ian Black; Ji-Yi Zhang; Hema Ramanna; Adam L. Bray; Zachary R. King; Peter R. LaFayette; Sivakumar Pattathil; Bryon S. Donohoe; Sushree S. Mohanty; David Ryno; Kelsey L. Yee; Olivia A. Thompson; Miguel Á. Rodríguez; Alexandru Dumitrache; Jace Natzke; Kim Winkeler; Cassandra Collins; Xiaohan Yang; Li Tan; Robert W. Sykes; Erica Gjersing; Angela Ziebell

Cell walls in crops and trees have been engineered for production of biofuels and commodity chemicals, but engineered varieties often fail multi-year field trials and are not commercialized. We engineered reduced expression of a pectin biosynthesis gene (Galacturonosyltransferase 4, GAUT4) in switchgrass and poplar, and find that this improves biomass yields and sugar release from biomass processing. Both traits were maintained in a 3-year field trial of GAUT4-knockdown switchgrass, with up to sevenfold increased saccharification and ethanol production and sixfold increased biomass yield compared with control plants. We show that GAUT4 is an α-1,4-galacturonosyltransferase that synthesizes homogalacturonan (HG). Downregulation of GAUT4 reduces HG and rhamnogalacturonan II (RGII), reduces wall calcium and boron, and increases extractability of cell wall sugars. Decreased recalcitrance in biomass processing and increased growth are likely due to reduced HG and RGII cross-linking in the cell wall.


Metabolomics | 2016

An efficient method for medium throughput screening of cuticular wax composition in different plant species

Josefina-Patricia Fernandez-Moreno; Sergey Malitsky; Justin Lashbrooke; Ajaya K. Biswal; Radu C. Racovita; Ewa J. Mellerowicz; Reinhard Jetter; Diego Orzaez; Asaph Aharoni; Antonio Granell

Introduction Most aerial plant organs are covered by a cuticle, which largely consists of cutin and wax. Cuticular waxes are mixtures of dozens of compounds, mostly very-long-chain aliphatics that are easily extracted by solvents. Over the last four decades, diverse cuticular wax analysis protocols have been developed, most of which are complex and time-consuming, and need to be adapted for each plant species or organ. Plant genomics and breeding programs often require mid-throughput metabolic phenotyping approaches to screen large numbers of individuals and obtain relevant biological information.ObjectivesTo generate a fast, simple and user-friendly methodology able to capture most wax complexity independently of the plant, cultivar and organ.MethodsHere we present a simple GC–MS method for screening relatively small wax amounts, sampled by short extraction with a versatile, uniform solvent. The method will be tested and validated in leaves and fruits from three different crop species: tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), apple (Malus domestica) and hybrid aspen (Populus tremula × tremuloides).ResultsConsistent results were obtained in tomato cultivar M82 across three consecutive years (2010–2012), two organs (leaf and fruit), and also in two different tomato (M82 and MicroTom) and apple (Golden Delicious and Granny Smith) cultivars. Our results on tomato wax composition match those reported previously, while our apple and hybrid aspen analyses provide the first comprehensive cuticular wax profile of these species.ConclusionThis protocol allows standardized identification and quantification of most cuticular wax components in a range of species.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2018

Functional Analysis of Cellulose Synthase CesA4 and CesA6 Genes in Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) by Overexpression and RNAi-Mediated Gene Silencing

Mitra Mazarei; Holly L. Baxter; Mi Li; Ajaya K. Biswal; Keonhee Kim; Xianzhi Meng; Yunqiao Pu; Wegi A. Wuddineh; Ji-Yi Zhang; Geoffrey B. Turner; Robert W. Sykes; Mark F. Davis; Michael K. Udvardi; Zeng-Yu Wang; Debra Mohnen; Arthur J. Ragauskas; Nicole Labbé; C. Neal Stewart

Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) is a leading lignocellulosic bioenergy feedstock. Cellulose is a major component of the plant cell walls and the primary substrate for saccharification. Accessibility of cellulose to enzymatic breakdown into fermentable sugars is limited by the presence of lignin in the plant cell wall. In this study, putatively novel switchgrass secondary cell wall cellulose synthase PvCesA4 and primary cell wall PvCesA6 genes were identified and their functional role in cellulose synthesis and cell wall composition was examined by overexpression and knockdown of the individual genes in switchgrass. The endogenous expression of PvCesA4 and PvCesA6 genes varied among including roots, leaves, stem, and reproductive tissues. Increasing or decreasing PvCesA4 and PvCesA6 expression to extreme levels in the transgenic lines resulted in decreased biomass production. PvCesA6-overexpressing lines had reduced lignin content and syringyl/guaiacyl lignin monomer ratio accompanied by increased sugar release efficiency, suggesting an impact of PvCesA6 expression levels on lignin biosynthesis. Cellulose content and cellulose crystallinity were decreased, while xylan content was increased in PvCesA4 and PvCesA6 overexpression or knockdown lines. The increase in xylan content suggests that the amount of non-cellulosic cell wall polysaccharide was modified in these plants. Taken together, the results show that the manipulation of the cellulose synthase genes alters the cell wall composition and availability of cellulose as a bioprocessing substrate.


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2017

Agronomic performance of Populus deltoides trees engineered for biofuel production

David Macaya-Sanz; Jin-Gui Chen; Udaya C. Kalluri; Wellington Muchero; Timothy J. Tschaplinski; Lee E. Gunter; Sandra J. Simon; Ajaya K. Biswal; Anthony C. Bryan; Raja S. Payyavula; Meng Xie; Yongil Yang; Jin Zhang; Debra Mohnen; Gerald A. Tuskan; Stephen P. DiFazio

BackgroundOne of the major barriers to the development of lignocellulosic feedstocks is the recalcitrance of plant cell walls to deconstruction and saccharification. Recalcitrance can be reduced by targeting genes involved in cell wall biosynthesis, but this can have unintended consequences that compromise the agronomic performance of the trees under field conditions. Here we report the results of a field trial of fourteen distinct transgenic Populus deltoides lines that had previously demonstrated reduced recalcitrance without yield penalties under greenhouse conditions.ResultsSurvival and productivity of the trial were excellent in the first year, and there was little evidence for reduced performance of the transgenic lines with modified target gene expression. Surprisingly, the most striking phenotypic effects in this trial were for two empty-vector control lines that had modified bud set and bud flush. This is most likely due to somaclonal variation or insertional mutagenesis. Traits related to yield, crown architecture, herbivory, pathogen response, and frost damage showed few significant differences between target gene transgenics and empty vector controls. However, there were a few interesting exceptions. Lines overexpressing the DUF231 gene, a putative O-acetyltransferase, showed early bud flush and marginally increased height growth. Lines overexpressing the DUF266 gene, a putative glycosyltransferase, had significantly decreased stem internode length and slightly higher volume index. Finally, lines overexpressing the PFD2 gene, a putative member of the prefoldin complex, had a slightly reduced volume index.ConclusionsThis field trial demonstrates that these cell wall modifications, which decreased cell wall recalcitrance under laboratory conditions, did not seriously compromise first-year performance in the field, despite substantial challenges, including an outbreak of a stem boring insect (Gypsonoma haimbachiana), attack by a leaf rust pathogen (Melampsora spp.), and a late frost event. This bodes well for the potential utility of these lines as advanced biofuels feedstocks.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2013

Carbohydrate and lignin are simultaneously solubilized from unpretreated switchgrass by microbial action at high temperature

Irina Kataeva; Marcus Foston; Sung Jae Yang; Sivakumar Pattathil; Ajaya K. Biswal; Farris L. Poole; Mirko Basen; Amanda M. Rhaesa; Tina P. Thomas; Parastoo Azadi; Victor Olman; Trina Saffold; Kyle E. Mohler; Derrick L. Lewis; Crissa Doeppke; Yining Zeng; Timothy J. Tschaplinski; William S. York; Mark F. Davis; Debra Mohnen; Ying Xu; Arthur J. Ragauskas; Shi You Ding; Robert M. Kelly; Michael G. Hahn; Michael W. W. Adams


Archive | 2011

Plants with altered cell wall biosynthesis and methods of use

Debra Mohnen; Ajaya K. Biswal; Zhangying Hao; Kimberly Hunt; Ivana Gelineo-Albersheim; Irina Kataeva; Michael W. W. Adams

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Mark F. Davis

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Robert W. Sykes

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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