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Dive into the research topics where Steven D. Karlen is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven D. Karlen.


Science | 2014

Monolignol Ferulate Transferase Introduces Chemically Labile Linkages into the Lignin Backbone

Curtis G. Wilkerson; Shawn D. Mansfield; Fachuang Lu; Saunia Withers; Ji-Young Park; Steven D. Karlen; Eliana Gonzales-Vigil; Dharshana Padmakshan; Faride Unda; Jorge Rencoret; John Ralph

Constructed for Deconstruction Lignin provides strength to wood but also impedes efficient degradation when wood is used as biofuel. Wilkerson et al. (p. 90) engineered poplar to produce lignin that is more amenable to degradation. From a handful of plants that contain more digestible lignin monomers, Angelica sinensis was selected and its monolignol transferase activities analyzed. The enzyme involved, coniferyl ferulate feruloyl-CoA monolignol transferase, was then expressed in poplar. The resulting poplar trees showed no difference in growth habit under greenhouse conditions, but their lignin showed improved digestibility. Engineered poplar lignin with readily cleavable ester bonds in the polymer backbone improves wood degradability. Redesigning lignin, the aromatic polymer fortifying plant cell walls, to be more amenable to chemical depolymerization can lower the energy required for industrial processing. We have engineered poplar trees to introduce ester linkages into the lignin polymer backbone by augmenting the monomer pool with monolignol ferulate conjugates. Herein, we describe the isolation of a transferase gene capable of forming these conjugates and its xylem-specific introduction into poplar. Enzyme kinetics, in planta expression, lignin structural analysis, and improved cell wall digestibility after mild alkaline pretreatment demonstrate that these trees produce the monolignol ferulate conjugates, export them to the wall, and use them during lignification. Tailoring plants to use such conjugates during cell wall biosynthesis is a promising way to produce plants that are designed for deconstruction.


Plant Journal | 2014

p‐Coumaroyl‐CoA:monolignol transferase (PMT) acts specifically in the lignin biosynthetic pathway in Brachypodium distachyon

Deborah L. Petrik; Steven D. Karlen; Cynthia L. Cass; Dharshana Padmakshan; Fachuang Lu; Sarah Liu; Philippe Le Bris; Sébastien Antelme; Nicholas Santoro; Curtis G. Wilkerson; Richard Sibout; Catherine Lapierre; John Ralph; John C. Sedbrook

Grass lignins contain substantial amounts of p-coumarate (pCA) that acylate the side-chains of the phenylpropanoid polymer backbone. An acyltransferase, named p-coumaroyl-CoA:monolignol transferase (OsPMT), that could acylate monolignols with pCA in vitro was recently identified from rice. In planta, such monolignol-pCA conjugates become incorporated into lignin via oxidative radical coupling, thereby generating the observed pCA appendages; however p-coumarates also acylate arabinoxylans in grasses. To test the authenticity of PMT as a lignin biosynthetic pathway enzyme, we examined Brachypodium distachyon plants with altered BdPMT gene function. Using newly developed cell wall analytical methods, we determined that the transferase was involved specifically in monolignol acylation. A sodium azide-generated Bdpmt-1 missense mutant had no (<0.5%) residual pCA on lignin, and BdPMT RNAi plants had levels as low as 10% of wild-type, whereas the amounts of pCA acylating arabinosyl units on arabinoxylans in these PMT mutant plants remained unchanged. pCA acylation of lignin from BdPMT-overexpressing plants was found to be more than three-fold higher than that of wild-type, but again the level on arabinosyl units remained unchanged. Taken together, these data are consistent with a defined role for grass PMT genes in encoding BAHD (BEAT, AHCT, HCBT, and DAT) acyltransferases that specifically acylate monolignols with pCA and produce monolignol p-coumarate conjugates that are used for lignification in planta.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2015

Effects of PHENYLALANINE AMMONIA LYASE (PAL) knockdown on cell wall composition, biomass digestibility, and biotic and abiotic stress responses in Brachypodium

Cynthia L. Cass; Antoine Peraldi; Patrick F. Dowd; Yaseen Mottiar; Nicholas Santoro; Steven D. Karlen; Yury V. Bukhman; Cliff E. Foster; Nick Thrower; Laura C. Bruno; Oleg V. Moskvin; Eric T. Johnson; Megan E. Willhoit; Megha Phutane; John Ralph; Shawn D. Mansfield; P. Nicholson; John C. Sedbrook

Highlight Reducing the function of PAL, the first enzyme in the phenylpropanoid pathway, in Brachypodium distachyon alters cell wall composition, increases fungal susceptibility, but minimally affects caterpillar herbivory and abiotic stress tolerance.


Science Advances | 2016

Monolignol ferulate conjugates are naturally incorporated into plant lignins

Steven D. Karlen; Chengcheng Zhang; Matthew L. Peck; Rebecca A. Smith; Dharshana Padmakshan; Kate E. Helmich; Heather C.A. Free; Seonghee Lee; Bronwen G. Smith; Fachuang Lu; John C. Sedbrook; Richard Sibout; John H. Grabber; Troy Runge; Kirankumar S. Mysore; Philip J. Harris; Laura E. Bartley; John Ralph

Plants have convergently evolved to use monolignol ferulate conjugates to produce lignins containing chemically labile backbone esters. Angiosperms represent most of the terrestrial plants and are the primary research focus for the conversion of biomass to liquid fuels and coproducts. Lignin limits our access to fibers and represents a large fraction of the chemical energy stored in plant cell walls. Recently, the incorporation of monolignol ferulates into lignin polymers was accomplished via the engineering of an exotic transferase into commercially relevant poplar. We report that various angiosperm species might have convergently evolved to natively produce lignins that incorporate monolignol ferulate conjugates. We show that this activity may be accomplished by a BAHD feruloyl–coenzyme A monolignol transferase, OsFMT1 (AT5), in rice and its orthologs in other monocots.


Plant Physiology | 2015

Engineering monolignol p-coumarate conjugates into Poplar and Arabidopsis lignins

Rebecca A. Smith; Eliana Gonzales-Vigil; Steven D. Karlen; Ji-Young Park; Fachuang Lu; Curtis G. Wilkerson; Lacey Samuels; John Ralph; Shawn D. Mansfield

Novel monolignol p-coumarate conjugates in eudicot lignin result from the introduction of a monocot acyltransferase. Lignin acylation, the decoration of hydroxyls on lignin structural units with acyl groups, is common in many plant species. Monocot lignins are decorated with p-coumarates by the polymerization of monolignol p-coumarate conjugates. The acyltransferase involved in the formation of these conjugates has been identified in a number of model monocot species, but the effect of monolignol p-coumarate conjugates on lignification and plant growth and development has not yet been examined in plants that do not inherently possess p-coumarates on their lignins. The rice (Oryza sativa) p-COUMAROYL-Coenzyme A MONOLIGNOL TRANSFERASE gene was introduced into two eudicots, Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and poplar (Populus alba × grandidentata), and a series of analytical methods was used to show the incorporation of the ensuing monolignol p-coumarate conjugates into the lignin of these plants. In poplar, specifically, the addition of these conjugates did not occur at the expense of the naturally incorporated monolignol p-hydroxybenzoates. Plants expressing the p-COUMAROYL-Coenzyme A MONOLIGNOL TRANSFERASE transgene can therefore produce monolignol p-coumarate conjugates essentially without competing with the formation of other acylated monolignols and without drastically impacting normal monolignol production.


Plant Physiology | 2017

Defining the Diverse Cell Populations Contributing to Lignification in Arabidopsis thaliana Stems

Rebecca A. Smith; Mathias Schuetz; Steven D. Karlen; David Bird; Naohito Tokunaga; Yashushi Sato; Shawn D. Mansfield; John Ralph; A. Lacey Samuels

Xylem vessel lignification in young Arabidopsis stems requires neighboring xylary parenchyma, but, as stems mature, fibers primarily produce their own lignin monomers. Many land plants evolved tall and sturdy growth habits due to specialized cells with thick lignified cell walls: tracheary elements that function in water transport and fibers that function in structural support. The objective of this study was to define how and when diverse cell populations contribute lignin precursors, monolignols, to secondary cell walls during lignification of the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) inflorescence stem. Previous work demonstrated that, when lignin biosynthesis is suppressed in fiber and tracheary element cells with thickened walls, fibers become lignin-depleted while vascular bundles still lignify, suggesting that nonlignifying neighboring xylem cells are contributing to lignification. In this work, we dissect the contributions of different cell types, specifically xylary parenchyma and fiber cells, to lignification of the stem using cell-type-specific promoters to either knock down an essential monolignol biosynthetic gene or to introduce novel monolignol conjugates. Analysis of either reductions in lignin in knockdown lines, or the addition of novel monolignol conjugates, directly identifies the xylary parenchyma and fiber cell populations that contribute to the stem lignification and the developmental timing at which each contribution is most important.


Plant Physiology | 2017

Highly Decorated Lignins in Leaf Tissues of the Canary Island Date Palm Phoenix canariensis

Steven D. Karlen; Rebecca A. Smith; Hoon Kim; Dharshana Padmakshan; Allison Bartuce; Justin K. Mobley; Heather C.A. Free; Bronwen G. Smith; Philip J. Harris; John Ralph

Phoenix canariensis leaf lignins vary between tissue region and contain an array of pendent groups. The cell walls of leaf base tissues of the Canary Island date palm (Phoenix canariensis) contain lignins with the most complex compositions described to date. The lignin composition varies by tissue region and is derived from traditional monolignols (ML) along with an unprecedented range of ML conjugates: ML-acetate, ML-benzoate, ML-p-hydroxybenzoate, ML-vanillate, ML-p-coumarate, and ML-ferulate. The specific functions of such complex lignin compositions are unknown. However, the distribution of the ML conjugates varies depending on the tissue region, indicating that they may play specific roles in the cell walls of these tissues and/or in the plant’s defense system.


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2017

Suppression of CINNAMOYL-CoA REDUCTASE increases the level of monolignol ferulates incorporated into maize lignins

Rebecca A. Smith; Cynthia L. Cass; Mona Mazaheri; Rajandeep S. Sekhon; Marlies Heckwolf; Heidi F. Kaeppler; Natalia de Leon; Shawn D. Mansfield; Shawn M. Kaeppler; John C. Sedbrook; Steven D. Karlen; John Ralph

BackgroundThe cell wall polymer lignin provides structural support and rigidity to plant cell walls, and therefore to the plant body. However, the recalcitrance associated with lignin impedes the extraction of polysaccharides from the cell wall to make plant-based biofuels and biomaterials. The cell wall digestibility can be improved by introducing labile ester bonds into the lignin backbone that can be easily broken under mild base treatment at room temperature. The FERULOYL-CoA MONOLIGNOL TRANSFERASE (FMT) enzyme, which may be naturally found in many plants, uses feruloyl-CoA and monolignols to synthesize the ester-linked monolignol ferulate conjugates. A mutation in the first lignin-specific biosynthetic enzyme, CINNAMOYL-CoA REDUCTASE (CCR), results in an increase in the intracellular pool of feruloyl-CoA.ResultsMaize (Zea mays) has a native putative FMT enzyme, and its ccr mutants produce an increased pool of feruloyl-CoA that can be used for conversion to monolignol ferulate conjugates. The decreased lignin content and monomers did not, however, impact the plant growth or biomass. The increase in monolignol conjugates correlated with an improvement in the digestibility of maize stem rind tissue.ConclusionsTogether, increased monolignol ferulates and improved digestibility in ccr1 mutant plants suggests that they may be superior biofuel crops.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2016

BdCESA7, BdCESA8, and BdPMT Utility Promoter Constructs for Targeted Expression to Secondary Cell-Wall-Forming Cells of Grasses

Deborah L. Petrik; Cynthia L. Cass; Dharshana Padmakshan; Cliff E. Foster; John P. Vogel; Steven D. Karlen; John Ralph; John C. Sedbrook

Utility vectors with promoters that confer desired spatial and temporal expression patterns are useful tools for studying gene and cellular function and for industrial applications. To target the expression of DNA sequences of interest to cells forming plant secondary cell walls, which generate most of the vegetative biomass, upstream regulatory sequences of the Brachypodium distachyon lignin biosynthetic gene BdPMT and the cellulose synthase genes BdCESA7 and BdCESA8 were isolated and cloned into binary vectors designed for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of monocots. Expression patterns were assessed using the β-glucuronidase gene GUSPlus and X-glucuronide staining. All three promoters showed strong expression levels in stem tissue at the base of internodes where cell wall deposition is most active, in both vascular bundle xylem vessels and tracheids, and in interfascicular tissues, with expression less pronounced in developmentally older tissues. In leaves, BdCESA7 and BdCESA8 promoter-driven expression was strongest in leaf veins, leaf margins, and trichomes; relatively weaker and patchy expression was observed in the epidermis. BdPMT promoter-driven expression was similar to the BdCESA promoters expression patterns, including strong expression in trichomes. The intensity and extent of GUS staining varied considerably between transgenic lines, suggesting that positional effects influenced promoter activity. Introducing the BdPMT and BdCESA8 Open Reading Frames into BdPMT and BdCESA8 utility promoter binary vectors, respectively, and transforming those constructs into Brachypodium pmt and cesa8 loss-of-function mutants resulted in rescue of the corresponding mutant phenotypes. This work therefore validates the functionality of these utility promoter binary vectors for use in Brachypodium and likely other grass species. The identification, in Bdcesa8-1 T-DNA mutant stems, of an 80% reduction in crystalline cellulose levels confirms that the BdCESA8 gene is a secondary-cell-wall-forming cellulose synthase.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2016

Cell Wall Composition and Biomass Recalcitrance Differences Within a Genotypically Diverse Set of Brachypodium distachyon Inbred Lines.

Cynthia L. Cass; Anastasiya A. Lavell; Nicholas Santoro; Cliff E. Foster; Steven D. Karlen; Rebecca A. Smith; John Ralph; David F. Garvin; John C. Sedbrook

Brachypodium distachyon (Brachypodium) has emerged as a useful model system for studying traits unique to graminaceous species including bioenergy crop grasses owing to its amenability to laboratory experimentation and the availability of extensive genetic and germplasm resources. Considerable natural variation has been uncovered for a variety of traits including flowering time, vernalization responsiveness, and above-ground growth characteristics. However, cell wall composition differences remain underexplored. Therefore, we assessed cell wall-related traits relevant to biomass conversion to biofuels in seven Brachypodium inbred lines that were chosen based on their high level of genotypic diversity as well as available genome sequences and recombinant inbred line (RIL) populations. Senesced stems plus leaf sheaths from these lines exhibited significant differences in acetyl bromide soluble lignin (ABSL), cell wall polysaccharide-derived sugars, hydroxycinnamates content, and syringyl:guaiacyl:p-hydroxyphenyl (S:G:H) lignin ratios. Free glucose, sucrose, and starch content also differed significantly in senesced stems, as did the amounts of sugars released from cell wall polysaccharides (digestibility) upon exposure to a panel of thermochemical pretreatments followed by hydrolytic enzymatic digestion. Correlations were identified between inbred line lignin compositions and plant growth characteristics such as biomass accumulation and heading date (HD), and between amounts of cell wall polysaccharides and biomass digestibility. Finally, stem cell wall p-coumarate and ferulate contents and free-sugars content changed significantly with increased duration of vernalization for some inbred lines. Taken together, these results show that Brachypodium displays substantial phenotypic variation with respect to cell wall composition and biomass digestibility, with some compositional differences correlating with growth characteristics. Moreover, besides influencing HD and biomass accumulation, vernalization was found to affect cell wall composition and free sugars accumulation in some Brachypodium inbred lines, suggesting genetic differences in how vernalization affects carbon flux to polysaccharides. The availability of related RIL populations will allow for the genetic and molecular dissection of this natural variation, the knowledge of which may inform ways to genetically improve bioenergy crop grasses.

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John Ralph

Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center

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Dharshana Padmakshan

Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center

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Shawn D. Mansfield

University of British Columbia

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Fachuang Lu

South China University of Technology

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Rebecca A. Smith

Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center

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Cynthia L. Cass

Illinois State University

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