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Dive into the research topics where Anna T. Olek is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna T. Olek.


Plant Physiology | 2009

Genetic Resources for Maize Cell Wall Biology

Bryan W. Penning; Charles T. Hunter; Reuben Tayengwa; Andrea L. Eveland; Christopher K. Dugard; Anna T. Olek; Wilfred Vermerris; Karen E. Koch; Donald R. McCarty; Mark F. Davis; Steven R. Thomas; Maureen C. McCann; Nicholas C. Carpita

Grass species represent a major source of food, feed, and fiber crops and potential feedstocks for biofuel production. Most of the biomass is contributed by cell walls that are distinct in composition from all other flowering plants. Identifying cell wall-related genes and their functions underpins a fundamental understanding of growth and development in these species. Toward this goal, we are building a knowledge base of the maize (Zea mays) genes involved in cell wall biology, their expression profiles, and the phenotypic consequences of mutation. Over 750 maize genes were annotated and assembled into gene families predicted to function in cell wall biogenesis. Comparative genomics of maize, rice (Oryza sativa), and Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) sequences reveal differences in gene family structure between grass species and a reference eudicot species. Analysis of transcript profile data for cell wall genes in developing maize ovaries revealed that expression within families differed by up to 100-fold. When transcriptional analyses of developing ovaries before pollination from Arabidopsis, rice, and maize were contrasted, distinct sets of cell wall genes were expressed in grasses. These differences in gene family structure and expression between Arabidopsis and the grasses underscore the requirement for a grass-specific genetic model for functional analyses. A UniformMu population proved to be an important resource in both forward- and reverse-genetics approaches to identify hundreds of mutants in cell wall genes. A forward screen of field-grown lines by near-infrared spectroscopic screen of mature leaves yielded several dozen lines with heritable spectroscopic phenotypes. Pyrolysis-molecular beam mass spectrometry confirmed that several nir mutants had altered carbohydrate-lignin compositions.


Plant Physiology | 2007

Maize Brittle stalk2 encodes a COBRA-like protein expressed in early organ development but required for tissue flexibility at maturity

Anoop Sindhu; Tiffany Langewisch; Anna T. Olek; Dilbag S. Multani; Maureen C. McCann; Wilfred Vermerris; Nicholas C. Carpita; Gurmukh S. Johal

The maize (Zea mays) brittle stalk2 (bk2) is a recessive mutant, the aerial parts of which are easily broken. The bk2 phenotype is developmentally regulated and appears 4 weeks after planting, at about the fifth-leaf stage. Before this time, mutants are indistinguishable from wild-type siblings. Afterward, all organs of the bk2 mutants turn brittle, even the preexisting ones, and they remain brittle throughout the life of the plant. Leaf tension assays and bend tests of the internodes show that the brittle phenotype does not result from loss of tensile strength but from loss in flexibility that causes the tissues to snap instead of bend. The Bk2 gene was cloned by a combination of transposon tagging and a candidate gene approach and found to encode a COBRA-like protein similar to rice (Oryza sativa) BC1 and Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) COBRA-LIKE4. The outer periphery of the stalk has fewer vascular bundles, and the sclerids underlying the epidermis possess thinner secondary walls. Relative cellulose content is not strictly correlated with the brittle phenotype. Cellulose content in mature zones of bk2 mature stems is lowered by 40% but is about the same as wild type in developing stems. Although relative cellulose content is lowered in leaves after the onset of the brittle phenotype, total wall mass as a proportion of dry mass is either unchanged or slightly increased, indicating a compensatory increase in noncellulosic carbohydrate mass. Fourier transform infrared spectra indicated an increase in phenolic ester content in the walls of bk2 leaves and stems. Total content of lignin is unaffected in bk2 juvenile leaves before or after appearance of the brittle phenotype, but bk2 mature and developing stems are markedly enriched in lignin compared to wild-type stems. Despite increased lignin in bk2 stems, loss of staining with phloroglucinol and ultraviolet autofluorescence is observed in vascular bundles and sclerid layers. Consistent with the infrared analyses, levels of saponifiable hydroxycinnamates are elevated in bk2 leaves and stems. As Bk2 is highly expressed during early development, well before the onset of the brittle phenotype, we propose that Bk2 functions in a patterning of lignin-cellulosic interactions that maintain organ flexibility rather than having a direct role in cellulose biosynthesis.


Plant Physiology | 2007

Neural Network Analyses of Infrared Spectra for Classifying Cell Wall Architectures

Maureen C. McCann; Marianne Defernez; Breeanna Urbanowicz; Jagdish Tewari; Tiffany Langewisch; Anna T. Olek; Brian Wells; Reginald H. Wilson; Nicholas C. Carpita

About 10% of plant genomes are devoted to cell wall biogenesis. Our goal is to establish methodologies that identify and classify cell wall phenotypes of mutants on a genome-wide scale. Toward this goal, we have used a model system, the elongating maize (Zea mays) coleoptile system, in which cell wall changes are well characterized, to develop a paradigm for classification of a comprehensive range of cell wall architectures altered during development, by environmental perturbation, or by mutation. Dynamic changes in cell walls of etiolated maize coleoptiles, sampled at one-half-d intervals of growth, were analyzed by chemical and enzymatic assays and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The primary walls of grasses are composed of cellulose microfibrils, glucuronoarabinoxylans, and mixed-linkage (1 → 3),(1 → 4)-β-d-glucans, together with smaller amounts of glucomannans, xyloglucans, pectins, and a network of polyphenolic substances. During coleoptile development, changes in cell wall composition included a transient appearance of the (1 → 3),(1 → 4)-β-d-glucans, a gradual loss of arabinose from glucuronoarabinoxylans, and an increase in the relative proportion of cellulose. Infrared spectra reflected these dynamic changes in composition. Although infrared spectra of walls from embryonic, elongating, and senescent coleoptiles were broadly discriminated from each other by exploratory principal components analysis, neural network algorithms (both genetic and Kohonen) could correctly classify infrared spectra from cell walls harvested from individuals differing at one-half-d interval of growth. We tested the predictive capabilities of the model with a maize inbred line, Wisconsin 22, and found it to be accurate in classifying cell walls representing developmental stage. The ability of artificial neural networks to classify infrared spectra from cell walls provides a means to identify many possible classes of cell wall phenotypes. This classification can be broadened to phenotypes resulting from mutations in genes encoding proteins for which a function is yet to be described.


The Plant Cell | 2014

The Structure of the Catalytic Domain of a Plant Cellulose Synthase and Its Assembly into Dimers

Anna T. Olek; Catherine Rayon; Lee Makowski; Hyung Rae Kim; Peter N. Ciesielski; John Badger; Lake N. Paul; Subhangi Ghosh; Daisuke Kihara; Michael F. Crowley; Michael E. Himmel; Jeffrey T. Bolin; Nicholas C. Carpita

Small-angle x-ray scattering gives a glimpse at the solution structure of the catalytic domains of plant cellulose synthase and their dimerization. Dimerization through the plant-specific sequences of the catalytic domain provides important clues for how Zn-finger domains couple these fundamental scaffold units into large, multimeric synthase complexes. Cellulose microfibrils are para-crystalline arrays of several dozen linear (1→4)-β-d-glucan chains synthesized at the surface of the cell membrane by large, multimeric complexes of synthase proteins. Recombinant catalytic domains of rice (Oryza sativa) CesA8 cellulose synthase form dimers reversibly as the fundamental scaffold units of architecture in the synthase complex. Specificity of binding to UDP and UDP-Glc indicates a properly folded protein, and binding kinetics indicate that each monomer independently synthesizes single glucan chains of cellulose, i.e., two chains per dimer pair. In contrast to structure modeling predictions, solution x-ray scattering studies demonstrate that the monomer is a two-domain, elongated structure, with the smaller domain coupling two monomers into a dimer. The catalytic core of the monomer is accommodated only near its center, with the plant-specific sequences occupying the small domain and an extension distal to the catalytic domain. This configuration is in stark contrast to the domain organization obtained in predicted structures of plant CesA. The arrangement of the catalytic domain within the CesA monomer and dimer provides a foundation for constructing structural models of the synthase complex and defining the relationship between the rosette structure and the cellulose microfibrils they synthesize.


Plant Physiology | 2017

Rice Cellulose SynthaseA8 Plant-Conserved Region Is a Coiled-Coil at the Catalytic Core Entrance

Phillip S. Rushton; Anna T. Olek; Lee Makowski; John Badger; C. Nicklaus Steussy; Nicholas C. Carpita; Cynthia V. Stauffacher

The crystal structure of a rice CesA8 plant-conserved region (P-CR), solved to 2.4 Å resolution, is dockedto a model of the catalytic domain of CesA8 using SAXS molecular envelopes. The crystallographic structure of a rice (Oryza sativa) cellulose synthase, OsCesA8, plant-conserved region (P-CR), one of two unique domains in the catalytic domain of plant CesAs, was solved to 2.4 Å resolution. Two antiparallel α-helices form a coiled-coil domain linked by a large extended connector loop containing a conserved trio of aromatic residues. The P-CR structure was fit into a molecular envelope for the P-CR domain derived from small-angle X-ray scattering data. The P-CR structure and molecular envelope, combined with a homology-based chain trace of the CesA8 catalytic core, were modeled into a previously determined CesA8 small-angle X-ray scattering molecular envelope to produce a detailed topological model of the CesA8 catalytic domain. The predicted position for the P-CR domain from the molecular docking models places the P-CR connector loop into a hydrophobic pocket of the catalytic core, with the coiled-coil aligned near the entrance of the substrate UDP-glucose into the active site. In this configuration, the P-CR coiled-coil alone is unlikely to regulate substrate access to the active site, but it could interact with other domains of CesA, accessory proteins, or other CesA catalytic domains to control substrate delivery.


In: Plants and BioEnergy, Advances Plant Biology | 2014

Towards Redesigning Cellulose Biosynthesis for Improved Bioenergy Feedstocks

Catherine Rayon; Anna T. Olek; Nicholas C. Carpita

With an estimated 200 billion tons produced annually, cellulose is the most abundant biopolymer on earth. Cellulose is expected to be the principal feedstock for liquid biofuels and bio-based products, but its para-crystalline nature results in recalcitrance to deconstruction required for biological and chemical conversion to useful products. Recent work solving the 3D structure of a bacterial cellulose synthase, modeling of plant cellulose synthases, and the 3D contour structure of the catalytic domain of a plant cellulose synthase have contributed new perspectives on the organization of catalytic units in the rosette complex. These discoveries stimulate new approaches to engineer the complex to make altered forms of cellulose for enhancing efficiency of biomass deconstruction for biofuel production or for synthesis of new materials and nanoproducts.


Plant Physiology | 2016

The Cell Wall Arabinose-Deficient Arabidopsis thaliana Mutant murus5 Encodes a Defective Allele of REVERSIBLY GLYCOSYLATED POLYPEPTIDE2

Christopher K. Dugard; Rachel A. Mertz; Catherine Rayon; Davide Mercadante; Christopher Hart; Matheus R. Benatti; Anna T. Olek; Phillip SanMiguel; Bruce R. Cooper; Wolf-Dieter Reiter; Maureen C. McCann; Nicholas C. Carpita

The low arabinose mur5 mutant has a missense mutation in the RGP2 UDP-Ara mutase, which makes the furanose form of arabinose in Arabidopsis. Traditional marker-based mapping and next-generation sequencing was used to determine that the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) low cell wall arabinose mutant murus5 (mur5) encodes a defective allele of REVERSIBLY GLYCOSYLATED POLYPEPTIDE2 (RGP2). Marker analysis of 13 F2 confirmed mutant progeny from a recombinant mapping population gave a rough map position on the upper arm of chromosome 5, and deep sequencing of DNA from these 13 lines gave five candidate genes with G→A (C→T) transitions predicted to result in amino acid changes. Of these five, only insertional mutant alleles of RGP2, a gene that encodes a UDP-arabinose mutase that interconverts UDP-arabinopyranose and UDP-arabinofuranose, exhibited the low cell wall arabinose phenotype. The identities of mur5 and two SALK insertional alleles were confirmed by allelism tests and overexpression of wild-type RGP2 complementary DNA placed under the control of the 35S promoter in the three alleles. The mur5 mutation results in the conversion of cysteine-257 to tyrosine-257 within a conserved hydrophobic cluster predicted to be distal to the active site and essential for protein stability and possible heterodimerization with other isoforms of RGP.


Plant Physiology | 2000

Cell Wall and Membrane-Associated Exo-β-d-Glucanases from Developing Maize Seedlings

Jong-Bum Kim; Anna T. Olek; Nicholas C. Carpita


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2012

Alterations in cell-wall glycosyl linkage structure of Arabidopsis murus mutants

Rachel A. Mertz; Anna T. Olek; Nicholas C. Carpita


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2017

Enhanced rates of enzymatic saccharification and catalytic synthesis of biofuel substrates in gelatinized cellulose generated by trifluoroacetic acid

Tânia M. Shiga; Weihua Xiao; Haibing Yang; Ximing Zhang; Anna T. Olek; Bryon S. Donohoe; Jiliang Liu; Lee Makowski; Tao Hou; Maureen C. McCann; Nicholas C. Carpita; Nathan S. Mosier

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Lee Makowski

Northeastern University

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Catherine Rayon

University of Picardie Jules Verne

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John Badger

San Diego State University

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