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Dive into the research topics where T. A. Gorshkova is active.

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Featured researches published by T. A. Gorshkova.


Plant Physiology | 1996

Cell-Wall Polysaccharides of Developing Flax Plants

T. A. Gorshkova; Sarah E. Wyatt; Vadim V. Salnikov; David M. Gibeaut; Marsel R. Ibragimov; Vera V. Lozovaya; Nicholas C. Carpita

Flax (Linum usitatissimum L.) fibers originate from procambial cells of the protophloem and develop in cortical bundles that encircle the vascular cylinder. We determined the polysaccharide composition of the cell walls from various organs of the developing flax plant, from fiber-rich strips peeled from the stem, and from the xylem. Ammonium oxalate-soluble polysaccharides from all tissues contained 5-linked arabinans with low degrees of branching, rhamnogalacturonans, and polygalacturonic acid. The fiber-rich peels contained, in addition, substantial amounts of a buffer-soluble, 4-linked galactan branched at the 0–2 and 0–3 positions with nonreducing terminal-galactosyl units. The cross-linking glycans from all tissues were (fucogalacto)xyloglucan, typical of type-I cell walls, xylans containing (1->)-[beta]-D-xylosyl units branched exclusively at the xylosyl O-2 with t-(4-O-methyl)-glucosyluronic acid units, and (galacto)glucomannans. Tissues containing predominantly primary cell wall contained a larger proportion of xyloglucan. The xylem cells were composed of about 60% 4-xylans, 32% cellulose, and small amounts of pectin and the other cross-linking polysaccharides. The noncellulosic polysaccharides of flax exhibit an uncommonly low degree of branching compared to similar polysaccharides from other flowering plants. Although the relative abundance of the various noncellulosic polysaccharides varies widely among the different cell types, the linkage structure and degree of branching of several of the noncellulosic polysaccharides are invariant.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2012

Tensional stress generation in gelatinous fibres: a review and possible mechanism based on cell-wall structure and composition

Ewa J. Mellerowicz; T. A. Gorshkova

Gelatinous fibres are specialized fibres, distinguished by the presence of an inner, gelatinous cell-wall layer. In recent years, they have attracted increasing interest since their walls have a desirable chemical composition (low lignin, low pentosan, and high cellulose contents) for applications such as saccharification and biofuel production, and they have interesting mechanical properties, being capable of generating high tensional stress. However, the unique character of gelatinous layer has not yet been widely recognized. The first part of this review presents a model of gelatinous-fibre organization and stresses the unique character of the gelatinous layer as a separate type of cell-wall layer, different from either primary or secondary wall layers. The second part discusses major current models of tensional stress generation by these fibres and presents a novel unifying model based on recent advances in knowledge of gelatinous wall structure. Understanding this mechanism could potentially lead to novel biomimetic developments in material sciences.


Planta | 2006

Secondary cell-wall assembly in flax phloem fibres: role of galactans

T. A. Gorshkova; Claudine Morvan

Non-lignified fibre cells (named gelatinous fibres) are present in tension wood and the stems of fibre crops (such as flax and hemp). These cells develop a very thick S2 layer within the secondary cell wall, which is characterised by (1) cellulose microfibrils largely parallel to the longitudinal axis of the cell, and (2) a high proportion of galactose-containing polymers among the non-cellulosic polysaccharides. In this review, we focus on the role of these polymers in the assembly of gelatinous fibres of flax. At the different stages of fibre development, we analyse in detail data based on sugar composition, linkages of pectic polymers, and immunolocalisation of the β-(1→4)-galactans. These data indicate that high molecular-mass gelatinous galactans accumulate in specialised Golgi-derived vesicles during fibre cell-wall thickening. They consist of RG-I-like polymers with side chains of β-(1→4)-linked galactose. Most of them are short, but there are also long chains containing up to 28 galactosyl residues. At fibre maturity, two types of cross-linked galactans are identified, a C–L structure that resembles the part of soluble galactan with long side chains and a C–S structure with short chains. Different possibilities for soluble galactan to give rise to C–L and C–S are analysed. In addition, we discuss the prospect for the soluble galactan in preventing the newly formed cellulose chains from completing immediate crystallisation. This leads to a hypothesis that firstly the secretion of soluble galactans plays a role in the axial orientation of cellulose microfibrils, and secondly the remodelling and cross-linking of pectic galactans are linked to the dehydration and the assembly of S2 layer.


Industrial Crops and Products | 2003

The snap point : a transition point in Linum usitatissimum bast fiber development

T. A. Gorshkova; Vadim V. Salnikov; S. B. Chemikosova; Marina Ageeva; Natalia V. Pavlencheva; Jan E.G. van Dam

The developing stem of fibre flax (Linum usitatissimum L.) contains a specific region called the ‘snap point’, where the fiber-enriched bast tissues considerably change their mechanical properties. The snap point was found to be present during a restricted period of plant development */the fast growth phase, and to disappear when stem growth was completed. To relate this snap point to bast fiber formation stages, the number of bast fiber cells and the thickness of their cell walls were followed on the stained cross-sections of the flax stem throughout plant development, using the progressing snap point as the reference. The snap point was shown to be the spot, above which the elongation of bast fiber cells is fully completed. This fast growth stage is the period when the maximum length of all bast fibers in the mature plant (a major characteristic of flax fiber quality) is fixed and would not be changed later. Autoradiography was used to visualize the mode of flax bast fiber elongation above the snap point. The even distribution of label was indicative for surface (diffusive) growth type. Elongation of individual fiber cells was estimated to take only 2 � /4 days with a rate of 1 � /2 cm per day, while cell wall thickening occurs mainly below snap point and lasts around 2 months. The special cell wall structural order, characteristic for mature bast fibers, first appeared at the snap point in the outer layer of the secondary cell wall. Schemes are included, illustrating the course of cell wall thickening and the localization of various stages of fiber formation on the stem of growing flax plant. The established exact localization and duration of flax bast fiber formation stages, and the existence of snap point as the manually identified morphological reference for the transition, permit to separate the bast fibers at different stages of development and make flax an attractive model system to study the functional genomics of fiber formation in technical crops. # 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.


Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences | 2012

Plant Fiber Formation: State of the Art, Recent and Expected Progress, and Open Questions

T. A. Gorshkova; Nina Brutch; Brigitte Chabbert; Michael K. Deyholos; Takahisa Hayashi; Simcha Lev-Yadun; Ewa J. Mellerowicz; Claudine Morvan; Godfrey Neutelings; Gilles Pilate

Plant fibers are one of the most important renewable resources, used as raw material in the paper industry, and for various textiles and for composites. Fibers are structural components in timber and an energy-rich component of fuel-wood. For the plant itself, fibers are important in establishing plant architecture, as a source of mechanical support, in defence from herbivory, and in some cases as elements with contractile properties, resembling those of muscles. In addition, fibers may store ergastic carbon resources and water. Here, we review various aspects of fiber development such as initiation, elongation, cell wall formation and multinuclearity, discuss open questions and propose directions for further research. Most of the recent progress in fiber formation biology, especially in cell wall structure and chemistry, emerged from studies of only a few model plants including flax, Populus spp., Eucalyptus spp., Arabidopsis thaliana and hemp. Considering the enormous importance of fibers to humanity, it is surprising how little is known about the biology of fiber formation.


Plant Physiology | 2011

Development of cellulosic secondary walls in flax fibers requires β-galactosidase

Melissa J. Roach; Natalia Mokshina; Ajay Badhan; Anastasiya V. Snegireva; Neil Hobson; Michael K. Deyholos; T. A. Gorshkova

Bast (phloem) fibers, tension wood fibers, and other cells with gelatinous-type secondary walls are rich in crystalline cellulose. In developing bast fibers of flax (Linum usitatissimum), a galactan-enriched matrix (Gn-layer) is gradually modified into a mature cellulosic gelatinous-layer (G-layer), which ultimately comprises most of the secondary cell wall. Previous studies have correlated this maturation process with expression of a putative β-galactosidase. Here, we demonstrate that β-galactosidase activity is in fact necessary for the dynamic remodeling of polysaccharides that occurs during normal secondary wall development in flax fibers. We found that developing stems of transgenic (LuBGAL-RNAi) flax with reduced β-galactosidase activity had lower concentrations of free Gal and had significant reductions in the thickness of mature cellulosic G-layers compared with controls. Conversely, Gn-layers, labeled intensively by the galactan-specific LM5 antibody, were greatly expanded in LuBGAL-RNAi transgenic plants. Gross morphology and stem anatomy, including the thickness of bast fiber walls, were otherwise unaffected by silencing of β-galactosidase transcripts. These results demonstrate a specific requirement for β-galactosidase in hydrolysis of galactans during formation of cellulosic G-layers. Transgenic lines with reduced β-galactosidase activity also had biochemical and spectroscopic properties consistent with a reduction in cellulose crystallinity. We further demonstrated that the tensile strength of normal flax stems is dependent on β-galactosidase-mediated development of the phloem fiber G-layer. Thus, the mechanical strength that typifies flax stems is dependent on a thick, cellulosic G-layer, which itself depends on β-galactosidase activity within the precursor Gn-layer. These observations demonstrate a novel role for matrix polysaccharides in cellulose deposition; the relevance of these observations to the development of cell walls in other species is also discussed.


Russian Journal of Plant Physiology | 2010

Specific type of secondary cell wall formed by plant fibers

T. A. Gorshkova; O. P. Gurjanov; P. V. Mikshina; N. N. Ibragimova; N. E. Mokshina; Vadim V. Salnikov; Marina Ageeva; S. I. Amenitskii; Tatyana Chernova; S. B. Chemikosova

The review sums data indicating that, in many plant fibers, the secondary cell wall contains so-called gelatinous layers of peculiar structure along with those of common (xylan) structure. Sometimes these gelatinous layers comprise the main bulk of the cell wall. Key characteristics of gelatinous cell wall are presented and compared with those of classic xylan-type cell wall. The process of gelatinous cell wall formation is considered in detail for flax phloem fibers; several characteristic features of this process were revealed: intense rearrangement of already deposited cell-wall layers, unusual dynamics of Golgi vesicles, the occurrence of the stage-specific polysaccharide with specific properties, high activity of β-galactosidase, and the presence of substantial amount of free galactose. Similarity and differences in the gelatinous cell wall formation in the fibers of various plant species are discussed.


Planta | 2005

Intrusive growth of flax phloem fibers is of intercalary type.

Marina Ageeva; B. Petrovska; H. Kieft; Vadim V. Salnikov; A. V. Snegireva; J.E.G. van Dam; W.L.H. van Veenendaal; A.M.C. Emons; T. A. Gorshkova; A.A.M. van Lammeren

Flax (Linum usitatissimum L.) phloem fibers elongate considerably during their development and intrude between existing cells. We questioned whether fiber elongation is caused by cell tip growth or intercalary growth. Cells with tip growth are characterized by having two specific zones of cytoplasm in the cell tip, one with vesicles and no large organelles at the very tip and one with various organelles amongst others longitudinally arranged cortical microtubules in the subapex. Such zones were not observed in elongating flax fibers. Instead, organelles moved into the very tip region, and cortical microtubules showed transversal and helical configurations as known for cells growing in intercalary way. In addition, pulse-chase experiments with Calcofluor White resulted in a spotted fluorescence in the cell wall all over the length of the fiber. Therefore, it is concluded that fiber elongation is not achieved by tip growth but by intercalary growth. The intrusively growing fiber is a coenocytic cell that has no plasmodesmata, making the fibers a symplastically isolated domain within the stem.


Plant Physiology | 1997

Turnover of galactans and other cell wall polysaccharides during development of flax plants

T. A. Gorshkova; S. B. Chemikosova; Vera V. Lozovaya; Nicholas C. Carpita

We investigated the synthesis and turnover of cell wall polysaccharides of the flax (Linum usitatissimum L.) plant during development of the phloem fibers. One-month-old flax plants were exposed to a 40-min pulse with 14CO2 followed by 8-h, 24-h, and 1-month periods of chase with ambient CO2, and radioactivity in cell wall sugars was determined in various plant parts. The relative radioactivity of glucose in noncellulosic polysaccharides was the highest compared with all other cell wall sugars immediately after the pulse and decreased substantially during the subsequent chase. The relative radioactivities of the other cell wall sugars changed with differing rates, indicating turnover of specific polysaccharides. Notably, after 1 month of chase there was a marked decrease in the proportional mass and total radioactivity in cell wall galactose, indicating a long-term turnover of the galactans enriched in the fiber-containing tissues. The ratio of radiolabeled xylose to arabinose also increased during the chase, indicating a turnover of arabinose-containing polymers and interconversion to xylose. The pattern of label redistribution differed between organs, indicating that the cell wall turnover processes are tissue- and cell-specific.


Russian Journal of Plant Physiology | 2010

Intrusive growth of sclerenchyma fibers

A. V. Snegireva; Marina Ageeva; S. I. Amenitskii; Tatyana Chernova; M. Ebskamp; T. A. Gorshkova

Intrusive growth is a type of cell elongation when the rate of its longitudinal growth is higher than that of surrounding cells; therefore, these cells intrude between the neighboring cells penetrating the middle lamella. The review considers the classical example of intrusive growth, e.g., elongation of sclerenchyma fibers when the cells achieve the length of several centimeters. We sum the published results of investigations of plant fiber intrusive growth and present some features of intrusive growth characterized by the authors for flax (Linum usitatissimum L.) and hemp (Cannabis sativa L.) fibers. The following characteristics of intrusive growth are considered: its rate and duration, relationship with the growth rate of surrounding cells, the type of cell elongation, peculiarities of the fiber primary cell wall structure, fibers as multinucleate cells, and also the control of intrusive growth. Genes, which expression is sharply reduced at suppression of intrusive growth, are also considered. Arguments for separation of cell elongation and secondary cell wall formation in phloem fibers and also data indicating diffuse type of cell enlargement during intrusive growth are presented.

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Marina Ageeva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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P. V. Mikshina

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Tatyana Chernova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Natalia Mokshina

Russian Academy of Sciences

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N. N. Ibragimova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Vadim V. Salnikov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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S. B. Chemikosova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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L. V. Kozlova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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O. V. Gorshkov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A. V. Snegireva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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