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Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol. 64, No. 12, pp. 3519–3550, 2013 doi:10.1093/jxb/ert201 10.1093/jxb/ert201 Darwin Review Biochemistry and physiological roles of enzymes that ‘cut and paste’ plant cell-wall polysaccharides Lenka Franková and Stephen C. Fry* The Edinburgh Cell Wall Group, Institute of Molecular Plant Sciences, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Edinburgh, The King’s Buildings, Mayfield Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JH, UK * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: [email protected] Received 15 April 2013; Revised 30 May 2013; Accepted 4 June 2013 Abstract The plant cell-wall matrix is equipped with more than 20 glycosylhydrolase activities, including both glycosidases and glycanases (exo- and endo-hydrolases, respectively), which between them are in principle capable of hydrolysing most of the major glycosidic bonds in wall polysaccharides. Some of these enzymes also participate in the ‘cutting and pasting’ (transglycosylation) of sugar residues—enzyme activities known as transglycosidases and transglycanases. Their action and biological functions differ from those of the UDP-dependent glycosyltransferases (polysaccharide synthases) that catalyse irreversible glycosyl transfer. Based on the nature of the substrates, two types of reaction can be distinguished: homo-transglycosylation (occurring between chemically similar polymers) and heterotransglycosylation (between chemically different polymers). This review focuses on plant cell-wall-localized glycosylhydrolases and the transglycosylase activities exhibited by some of these enzymes and considers the physiological need for wall polysaccharide modification in vivo. It describes the mechanism of transglycosylase action and the classification and phylogenetic variation of the enzymes. It discusses the modulation of their expression in plants at the transcriptional and translational levels, and methods for their detection. It also critically evaluates the evidence that the enzyme proteins under consideration exhibit their predicted activity in vitro and their predicted action in vivo. Finally, this review suggests that wall-localized glycosylhydrolases with transglycosidase and transglycanase abilities are widespread in plants and play important roles in the mechanism and control of plant cell expansion, differentiation, maturation, and wall repair. Key words: Cell expansion, cell wall, glycanases, glycosidases, hemicelluloses, hydrolysis, oligosaccharides, pectins, remodelling, transglycanases, transglycosidases, transglycosylation, xyloglucan. Introduction A primary wall layer is (or was, at the time of its formation) susceptible to plastic extension: i.e. able to accommodate the cell’s irreversible expansion. Secondary wall layers, in contrast, which may be deposited internal to the primary wall after cell expansion has ceased and have quite distinct chemical compositions, do not subsequently increase in area. The primary wall thus serves the key role of defining the shape and size of the plant cell. Plant primary cell walls are not rigid or inert ‘boxes’ but constitute a flexible and metabolically active extraprotoplasmic compartment; they control cell expansion by varying their extensibility. This ability to change biophysically is conferred by biochemical reactions and molecular rearrangements that occur within the walls (in muro). The constituent polysaccharides of plant cell walls are synthesized by the protoplast, mostly within Golgi bodies except that cellulose and callose are produced at the plasma membrane. After synthesis in the Golgi body, polysaccharides are carried in vesicles to the plasma membrane to be deposited by exocytosis on the inner face of the existing wall. In muro, the polysaccharides may undergo many interesting and physiologically relevant modifications, © The Author [2013]. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology. For permissions, please email: [email protected] 3520 | Franková and Fry including transglycosylation (‘cutting and pasting’ molecules), cross-linking, and hydrolysis. Other proposed wallremodelling reactions include transacylation (of polymers possessing carboxy groups) and non-enzymic scission caused by hydroxyl radicals. By means of this repertoire of polysaccharide modifications, the cell has the subtlety to manipulate the ‘nuts and bolts’ of development, especially the direction and rate of cell growth, by remodelling wall polysaccharides. Physiological roles of the primary cell wall that can be finetuned by the in-muro metabolic reactions discussed in this review include not only dictating cell shape and size but also causing programmed leaf abscission, pod dehiscence for seed dispersal, seed-coat bursting during germination, becoming ‘perforated’ in the case of xylem and phloem, supplying food reserves for seedling growth, generating and subsequently inactivating oligosaccharin signals, governing the wall’s porosity and ability to adsorb metal ions, and defending the cell against microbial ingress. Chemical composition of the primary cell wall To understand wall remodelling, we need a summary of primary cell-wall chemistry. In land plants, polysaccharides constitute the bulk of this wall’s dry mass, grouped into three broad classes: cellulose, hemicelluloses, and pectins (Scheller and Ulvskov, 2010; Albersheim et al., 2011; Fry, 2011). In dicot primary walls, these three classes occur at very roughly 1:1:1 by weight. Cellulose forms partially crystalline microfibrils, the wall’s skeleton, devoid of internal water; hemicelluloses hydrogen-bond strongly to the cellulose and may also become locally trapped within microfibrils; and pectins plus hemicelluloses together constitute a hydrated matrix occupying the space between microfibrils (Fig. 1). In a widely adopted (but speculative) model, long rope-like hemicellulose chains adhere to multiple microfibrils and tether them, restraining cell expansion (Fry, 1989; Hayashi, 1989). Recent critical evaluation (Park and Cosgrove, 2012) suggests that, although correct in outline, this model is an oversimplification. Fig 1. Model of the polysaccharide framework in a plant cell wall, generalized for poalean and non-poalean walls. 1, Cellulose: cellulose microfibrils; 2–6, hemicelluloses: 2, xyloglucan; 3, mixed-linkage glucan; 4, xylan and related heteroxylans; 5, callose; 6, mannan and related heteromannans; 7–11, Pectins: 7, galactan; 8, arabinan; 9, homogalacturonan; 10, rhamnogalacturonan I; 11, rhamnogalacturonan II; 12, boron bridge; 13, ‘egg-box’ with calcium bridges; 14–16, Non-polysaccharide components: 14, enzymes and structural proteins; 15, cellulose synthase complex; 16, transport vesicles. Plant cell-wall enzymes | 3521 Cellulose is a chain of (1→4)-linked β-Glc residues lacking side chains.1 An elementary microfibril (produced by a single ‘rosette’ of cellulose synthases) consists of ~16–18 cellulose molecules lying in parallel (Guerriero et al., 2010). Cellulose cannot be extracted from the wall into aqueous solution except by aggressive complexing agents such as cadoxen (10% cadmium oxide in aqueous 30% 1,2-diaminoethane). Hemicelluloses are polymers with a backbone of β-Glc, β-Xyl, or β-Man (or β-Man and β-Glc), mainly or entirely (1→4)-linked (except callose), and usually possessing short side chains; most are neutral. Highly significant hemicelluloses of the primary walls of all vascular plants are xyloglucans (backbone β-(1→4)-Glc; side chains mainly α-Xyl, and often also β-Gal-(1→2)-α-Xyl and α-Fuc-(1→2)-β-Gal-(1→2)-αXyl, attached at position 6 of some of the Glc residues) and xylans sensu lato (backbone β-(1→4)-Xyl; side chains usually α-Araf and/or α-GlcA attached at positions 2 and/or 3 of some of the Xyl residues (the polysaccharides may then be more precisely referred to as arabinoxylans, glucuronoarabinoxylans, etc., some being acidic). Xyloglucans predominate in noncommelinid species; xylans in commelinids. Sugar sequences within xyloglucan chains can be specified by a series of code letters, comparable to those used in reporting sequences of proteins or DNA; for details see Fry et al. (1993). For example, G = β-Glc of the backbone, not further substituted; X = α-Xyl-β-Glc; L = β-Gal-(1→2)-α-Xyl-β-Glc; F = α-Fuc(1→2)-β-Gal-(1→2)-α-Xyl-β-Glc. All 18 xyloglucan code-letters currently in use are listed by Franková and Fry (2012b). Frequently observed sequences in dicot xyloglucans include XXXG, XXLG, XXFG, and XLFG. A comparable system of abbreviations is in use for xylan sequences (Fauré et al., 2009). Relatively minor primary wall hemicelluloses in most land plants, but predominant in eusporangiate ferns, are mannans sensu lato (backbone β-(1→4)-Man, often with interspersed β-(1→4)-Glc; sidechains often α-Gal on position 6 of some of the Man residues). An additional vascular land-plant hemicellulose, restricted to but abundant in commelinids (grasses, cereals, etc.) and Equisetum (horsetails) (see also the section ‘Phylogenetic variation’), is mixed-linkage glucan (MLG) (backbone β-(1→4)-Glc interspersed with a minority of β-(1→3)-Glc residues; no side chains). Although chemically diverse, hemicelluloses generally share an ability to hydrogen-bond to cellulose and are extractable from the cell wall in alkali (optimally 6 M NaOH at 37 °C; Edelmann and Fry, 1992). Pectins (Fig. 1) are α-GalA-rich polysaccharides built up of distinct domains, the simplest of which is homogalacturonan, a linear homopolymer of (1→4)-linked α-GalA residues, partially methyl-esterified and often also partially O-acetylated. More complex pectic domains are the rhamnogalacturonans (RG-I and RG-II) and xylogalacturonan. It is widely thought that these pectic domains are glycosidically bonded, end-to-end, into a complete polysaccharide, conveniently described simply as ‘pectin’. Details of pectin structure are given by Albersheim et al. (2011) and Fry (2011). In brief, RG-I has a backbone of the repeating disaccharide, ...(1→4)-GalA-(1→2)-Rha-..., with some of the Rha residues carrying neutral oligosaccharide side chains rich in Gal and/or Araf. RG-II is a small domain with a backbone of (1→4)-linked α-GalA residues with highly complex oligosaccharides linked to the backbone via Apif residues; in the cell wall, RG-II domains are usually cross-linked to each other via borate diester groups attached to one of the Api residues. Primary wall polysaccharides may possess, in addition to sugar residues, non-carbohydrate substituents: for example, acetyl, feruloyl, and methyl esters. Other non-carbohydrate components of certain primary walls include (glyco)proteins, lignin, cutin, suberin, and silica. It is often incorrectly stated that primary walls do not lignify; however, lignification of xylem vessels begins in their primary walls. The ratio of the various primary wall polysaccharides differs between taxa and between tissues, and varies developmentally within a given cell. For example, during maturation, MLG increases in Equisetum (Fry et al., 2008b) but decreases in commelinids (Buckeridge et al., 2004). Pectins are major components of all fast-growing cells except in commelinids, which are particularly rich in xylans (Carpita and Gibeaut, 1993). Mannans are highly abundant in some fern allies and are also present in many algal species, some of which completely lack cellulose (Popper and Fry, 2004). Several other important shifts in wall polysaccharide chemistry accompanied major events in plant evolution. For example, xyloglucans are present in all land plants examined but have not been chemically demonstrated in any algae – including the charophytes,2 from which all land plants originated – implying that the ‘invention’ of xyloglucan accompanied (and may have enabled) the invasion by plants of the land. Wall-remodelling enzymes targeting the major wall polysaccharides thus need to be tailored to taxa, tissues, and developmental stages. The physiological need for wall polysaccharide modification in vivo Cell expansion: hydrolysis of wall components The primary wall confers the cell’s ability to define its own shape and size. Cell expansion, an irreversible increase in cell volume often exceeding 1000-fold, is a dramatic and unique feature of plants, with no equivalent in animals or most micro-organisms. Controlled plant cell expansion demands the reversible ‘loosening’ of the cellulose–hemicellulose–pectin primary 1 Sugar abbreviations: Api, d-apiose; Ara, l-arabinose; Fuc, l-fucose; Gal, d-galactose; GalA, d-galacturonic acid; Glc, d-glucose; GlcA, d-glucuronic acid; Man, d-mannose; Rha, l-rhamnose; Xyl, d-xylose. All sugars are in the six-membered pyranose ring form unless marked ‘f’ for furanose. 2 The status of xyloglucan in charophytes is controversial. Immunological evidence supports the presence of a xyloglucan-like polymer in Chara, Coleochaete, Cosmarium, and Netrium (Van Sandt et al., 2007; Sørensen et al., 2011), but enzymic digestion of Chara and Coleochaete cell walls has consistently failed to yield xyloglucan’s diagnostic disaccharide, isoprimeverose (e.g. Popper and Fry, 2003). Methylation analysis of Spirogyra cell walls demonstrated 4-linked and 4,6-linked Glc and terminal Xyl residues (Ikegaya et al., 2008), but these residues’ anomerism was not determined and the Glc residues could have been α-Glc of starch (which is often difficult to completely remove by amylase digestion) rather than β-Glc of xyloglucan, and the terminal Xyl residues could have been β-Xyl from xylans rather than α-Xyl of xyloglucan. Resolution of these discrepancies requires further research. 3522 | Franková and Fry wall. Thus, plants will require a battery of wall-manipulating enzymes not found in other organisms (Labavitch, 1981; Fry, 1995, 2004; de la Torre et al., 2002; Minic, 2008). Besides the intrinsic interest of these wall enzymes for understanding plant growth, they are also exciting subjects for genetic manipulation and targets for novel herbicides. Enzymes that loosen the primary wall, for example by catalysing its partial hydrolysis, may be expected to step up the growth rate. Wall assembly: recruiting new polysaccharides Roles of polysaccharide-remodelling enzymes are not confined to cell expansion. For example, enzyme activities that ‘cut and paste’ glycosidic bonds (transglycanases, e.g. xyloglucan endotransglucosylase, XET) can create new polysaccharide–polysaccharide linkages and thus play a role in recruiting newly secreted polysaccharides into the wall fabric, contributing to wall assembly. In addition, hetero-transglycanases can graft part of one polysaccharide to a qualitatively different one, which may also contribute to wall assembly. Wall loosening and/or strengthening: rewiring glycosidic bonds in old polysaccharide chains The cutting/pasting of polysaccharide chains by transglycanases occurs not only at the moment of secretion but also between pairs of polysaccharides which have already been part of the wall architecture for some time. It is difficult to deduce whether such reactions contribute predominantly to wall loosening and thus growth promotion (Thompson and Fry, 2001) or to wall strengthening by stitching polymers together, (e.g. in xylem cell walls; Nishikubo et al., 2007). Other homo-transglycanase reactions include the cutting/pasting of xylans to xylans and of mannans to mannans; precise physiological roles for these processes are unclear, but may include reserve mobilization after germination of mannan-rich seeds and wall loosening during growth and fruit softening. In addition, a hetero-transglycanase activity, MLG:xyloglucan endotransglucosylase (MXE), can link a portion of MLG to a xyloglucan chain, thus creating a chimaeric polymer with MLG at one end and xyloglucan at the other. This may contribute to strengthening the Equisetum stem in mature plants, helping it to resist wind damage or herbivory. Abscission/dehiscence Another role for wall polysaccharide modification concerns enzymes that disrupt tissue cohesion by lysing the primary wall and/or middle lamella, thus permitting cell–cell separation (Le Cam et al., 1994; González-Carranza et al., 2007; Zhang et al., 2007). This enables: leaf abscission in deciduous trees; dehiscence of pod-like fruits, e.g. follicles, legumes, siliquae, and capsules; softening in drupes and berries; and the spatially and temporally targeted rupture of the endosperm and/or seed coat at the moment of germination. Perforations On a highly localized scale, plant enzymes can bore holes in cell walls, for example during the formation of xylem perforation plates, phloem sieve plates, and plasmodesmata, enabling the intercellular transport of xylem sap, sucrose, and RNAs, respectively (Bollhöner et al., 2012; Tilsner and Oparka, 2012). Wall polysaccharide mobilization Enzymic lysis also occurs in the walls of certain seeds, whose enormous stockpiles of specific polysaccharides such as xyloglucans or galactomannans are hydrolysed, ultimately to monosaccharides, providing a carbon and energy source for the seedling until it attains photosynthetic self-sufficiency. Related to seed reserves, it would a priori appear energy-efficient for deciduous trees to degrade some leaf polysaccharides shortly before abscission and to salvage the resultant sugars by basipetally transporting them via the phloem (Hoch, 2007); more work is required, however, to test this idea. Making oligosaccharins On a much smaller scale, but nevertheless qualitatively significant, some wall polysaccharides undergo enzymic turnover to release biologically active oligosaccharides (‘oligosaccharins’) with putative signalling roles (McDougall and Fry, 1991; Darvill et al., 1992; Aldington and Fry, 1993; BeňováKákošová et al., 2006). For example, fragments of xyloglucan possessing an α-Fuc residue can at concentrations of 1 nM antagonize the cell expansion that is induced by 1 μM auxin. Conversely, higher concentrations (0.1–10 μM) of several xyloglucan oligosaccharides can promote cell expansion, and such concentrations are indeed present in the apoplast in vivo, at least in cell-suspension cultures (Fry, 1986). Glucomannan-related oligosaccharins have been reported to promote cell elongation in roots but inhibit it in hypocotyls (Richterová-Kučerová et al., 2012). Other oligosaccharins, produced at least in vitro from homogalacturonan, antagonize auxin-induced growth (Ferrari et al., 2008) and trigger wound-hormone release; however, such oligogalacturonides appear more likely to be generated by the action of microbial enzymes than by the plant’s own repertoire. Removing oligosaccharins In addition to enzymes generating oligosaccharins from polysaccharides, plants also possess enzymes that degrade oligosaccharins, either by hydrolysis or by grafting large poly saccharides to them (Baydoun and Fry, 1989; Darvill et al., 1992; García-Romera and Fry, 1995). This may be important since biological ‘messages’ need to be inactivated when the information that they carry is no longer relevant to the plant’s environmental or developmental situation. Wall porosity Partial degradation of certain cell-wall polysaccharides, especially pectins, can finetune the molecular pore size of the wall fabric (Carpita et al., 1979; Baron-Epel et al., 1988), thereby modulating what sizes of molecules, such as arabinogalactanproteins, can potentially move intercellularly as signals. Plant cell-wall enzymes | 3523 Cell defence Glycosidase and glycanase activities Finally, the wall contains enzymes that may render it impenetrable by potential pathogens or indigestible by herbivores. Such enzymes would be mainly those involved in cross-linking, for example peroxidases and phenol oxidases (laccases). To the list of wall-bolstering wall enzymes could be added the newly discovered acyltransferase, cutin synthase (Yeats et al., 2012). An enzyme catalysing the hydrolysis of poly- and/or oligosaccharides will attack either at terminal sugar residues (almost always non-reducing termini) or at mid-chain residues, not both. Such exo- and endo-glycosyl hydrolase activities are termed ‘glycosidases’ and ‘glycanases’, respectively. Note also the distinction between ‘glyc-’, referring to an unspecified sugar residue and ‘gluc-’, referring to a glucose residue. Examples of glycosidases are α-xylosidase, β-xylosidase, and β-glucosidase; examples of glycanases include (1→4)β-xylanase and (1→4)-β-glucanase (cellulase). In the following sugar sequences, the reducing terminus is on the right. An enzyme that splits off the non-reducing terminal β-Xyl residue from the model substrate (1→4)-β-xylohexaose (Xyl6) is a β-xylosidase (Fig. 2A): Glycosidic bonds and enzyme activities that act on them In this work, the term ‘enzyme’ follows the Enzyme Commission usage: it is defined as an ‘activity’, which, however, may be shared by multiple isozymes encoded by different genes. Fig. 2. Diagrammatic representations of the activities of glycosidases (A, B), glycanases (C), transglycosidases (D, E), and transglycanases (F), Each circle represents a sugar residue; , bond cleaved. 3524 | Franková and Fry We will show the reactants and products in the order: donor + acceptor ↔ hybrid product + leaving group. It is helpful to distinguish readily reversible transglycosylation reactions, in which the bond cleaved has an energy (ΔG0′; i.e. free energy of hydrolysis) similar to that of the bond formed, from essentially irreversible ones (as will be discussed in the next section). Reversible transglycosylation is appropriate for wall remodelling, in which the reaction does not proceed in any defined direction. By analogy with hydrolase names, we use the terms ‘transglycosidase’ and ‘transglycanase’ for exo- and endo-enzymes respectively, referring to the glycosidic bond that is cleaved. Thus, the reactions in Fig. 2D–F represent trans-β-xylosidase, trans-β-galactosidase, and trans-β-xylanase, respectively (an alternative nomenclature uses ‘xylan endotransglycosylase’ instead of trans-β-xylanase; Johnston et al., 2013). When the donor is qualitatively similar to the acceptor, the reaction is ‘homo-transglycosylation’. Examples include the activities of trans-β-mannanase, trans-β-xylanase, and xyloglucan endotransglucosylase (XET,3 ‘trans-xyloglucanase’; Fig 4). When the donor and acceptor are qualitatively different (hetero-transglycosylation), the nomenclature is more complex since both the donor and the acceptor have to be specified. A convenient system for naming such activities takes the form ‘donor:acceptor endotransglycosylase’, e.g. MLG:xyloglucan endotransglucosylase (MXE; Fig 4). Xyl-Xyl-Xyl-Xyl-Xyl-Xyl + H2O → Xyl + Xyl-Xyl-Xyl-Xyl-Xyl. An enzyme that cleaves a mid-chain linkage in the same substrate is a β-xylanase (Fig. 2C), for example: Xyl-Xyl-Xyl-Xyl-Xyl-Xyl + H2O → Xyl-Xyl-Xyl-Xyl + Xyl-Xyl. The terms ‘glycosidase’ and ‘exo’ do not imply that the attacked terminal residue is necessarily located at the end of the backbone; side chains are also non-reducing termini, for example certain β-Gal residues of xyloglucan attacked by β-galactosidase (Fig. 2B). Glycanases catalyse the hydrolysis of glycosidic bonds within the backbone of the polysaccharide (Fig. 2C) or mid-chain bonds within a lengthy side chain. Glycosidases generally have high specificity for the glycosyl group attacked, but there is often a lower specificity towards the nature of the ‘aglycone’ (for explanation, see Fig. 3A). For example, β-xylosidase may release monomeric xylose from the non-reducing terminus of xylan (Xyln), xylohexaose (Xyl6; Fig. 3c), and even p-nitrophenyl β-xyloside (Fig. 3B). However, there are important cases of tighter specificity: for example, plant α-xylosidases release xylose from the 1st but not the 2nd or 3rd (counting from the non-reducing end) Xyl residue of the xyloglucan heptasaccharide XXXG and do not attack p-nitrophenyl α-xyloside; Fanutti et al., 1991). Transglycosidase and transglycanase activities: readily reversible Transglycosylation is a ‘cutting and pasting’ reaction in which a glycosidic bond is cleaved, but not by hydrolysis. Instead, the broken bond’s energy is conserved in forming a new glycosidic linkage (Fig. 2D–F). The substrates are a donor and an acceptor; the products are a ‘hybrid’ and a leaving group (Fig. 2D). ‘Irreversible’ transglycosylation Essentially irreversible transglycosylation reactions make the glycosidic bonds during de-novo polysaccharide synthesis. Aglycone (oligosaccharide) a b Aglycone (p-nitrophenol) Aglycone (general) H H HO H OH H O H OH O H H H HO H OH H O H OH c NO2 H H Glycosidic oxygen R O H H H H H HO H OH H O O H OH H OH H H O O H OH H H OH H O H H OH OH n Glycosidic bond to be cleaved Anomeric centre Glycosyl group (β-Xylosyl) Glycosyl group (β -Xylosyl) Glycosyl group (β -Xylosyl) Fig. 3. Glycosyl groups versus aglycones, and the bonds cleaved by glycosidases and transglycosidases. In each case, the aglycone is released (with an H atom in place of the red bond). Green arrow, glycosidic oxygen atom; red line, glycosidic bond to be cleaved by the glycosidase; black arrow, anomeric centre of the glycosyl group under consideration. Note that an aglycone can itself be a sugar. 3 ‘XET’ was defined by Rose et al. (2002) as ‘xyloglucan endotransglucosylase’ activity, which is a more precise and informative term that the previously used ‘xyloglucan endotransglycosylase’. Since then, ‘endotransglucosylase’ has been criticized (Eklöf and Brumer, 2010) on the grounds that the enzyme transfers a whole length of the polysaccharide chain, not just a single Glc residue. However, this is not a valid criticism because the distinction between ‘gluco’ and ‘glyco’ does not concern the number of residues transferred but their identity. ‘Transglucosylase’ specifies that a Glc–X bond is cleaved and reformed; a ‘transglycosylase’ could act on a Xyl–X or Gal–X bond, and is thus a term that might be used when the nature of the cleaved/reformed bond is uncertain. Fig. 4. Proposed biological roles of enzymes with transglycosidase and transglycanase activities that catalyse transglycosylation reactions between oligosaccharides and/or polysaccharides of the plant cell wall. Plant cell-wall enzymes | 3525 3526 | Franková and Fry Here, the bond broken is more ‘energy-rich’ (has a larger negative ΔG0′ of hydrolysis) than the one made. Irreversibility is appropriate for biosynthesis of major metabolic end products such as wall polysaccharides. The high-energy donors are usually NDP-sugars (e.g. UDP-xylose), the acceptor is the nascent polysaccharide, and the enzymes are polysaccharide synthases or ‘NDP-sugar : glycan glycosyltransferases’. This type of enzyme is membrane-bound and not discussed in detail in this review. Carbohydrate-Active enZyme proteins and their genes Browsing for plant ‘cutting-and-pasting’ enzymes We will now describe specific examples of potential wallremodelling enzymes, focusing on transglycosidases and transglycanases. Thanks mainly to recent progress in proteomics, genomics, and metabolomics, numerous enzyme databases have been created and are now available online. However, this enormous resource is significantly reduced when one is searching for plant enzyme databases, especially when focusing on those that provide information on carbohydrate-active catalytic proteins. Some glycosidases and glycanases have the ability to catalyse transglycosylation in addition to hydrolysis; however, extracting the data on such enzymes that ‘cut and paste’ plant cell-wall polysaccharides can be laborious, especially when an initial search for what the user considers the ‘appropriate’ keyword fails. For example, ‘transglycosidase’, ‘transglycosylase’, or ‘glycosyltransferase’ have not been incorporated into the headline entries under ‘glycosidases’ but are mentioned only marginally, if at all. On the other hand, many databases provide entries which are not directly related to the term sought, so users have to go through numerous categories manually. Nevertheless, more than 19 databases that to some extent provide information on plant wall-modifying enzymes and/or their genes are currently available online (Table 1). One of the most browsed enzyme databases is that of the International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (IUBMB), covering enzyme nomenclature, published online in 1992. This is a list of recommended names for enzyme activities, classified into classes and sub-classes according to Enzyme Commission (EC) numbers. It is based on the enzymes’ specific substrate preferences and is therefore guided by the reactions they catalyse. As this concept does not take into account the structural topology and stereochemical mechanistic features of enzymes, it can be applied only to those proteins whose functions have been biochemically identified. The same principle (i.e. classification based on EC numbers) was employed in constructing the BRENDA and IntEnz/ENZYME databases (Table 1), which, in addition to nomenclature, provide detailed information about enzyme features (such as kinetics, stability, substrate specificity, products formed, cofactors, subunits, etc.) and gene sequences, respectively. Unlike many other databases, BRENDA is highly searchable and enables immediate access to helpful data on enzyme sources and localization, reaction and specificity, stability, and structure. However, despite BRENDA’s virtues, there are a few cases in which the relevant records are supported by inappropriate references or are misleading. For example, the endo-1,5-α-l-arabinanase entry lists Arabidopsis thaliana and Gossypium hirsutum under the ‘Organism’ item, wrongly implying that α-arabinanase was detected in those two species. In fact, α-arabinanase activity was never detected either in Arabidopsis or Gossypium. Instead, a commercial (non-plant) α-arabinanase was used by the cited authors to digest Arabidopsis cytosolic heteroglycans (Fettke et al., 2006) and cotton wall polysaccharides (Zheng and Mort, 2008). To avoid any misinterpretation, users should cross-reference to verify the accuracy of data extracted from any online resources. The Carbohydrate-Active enZyme database As an alternative to the EC system, Carbohydrate-Active enZyme (CAZy) classifies carbohydrate-acting enzymes and carbohydrate-binding proteins into families based on their sequence and structural folding features (Henrissat, 1991; Henrissat and Bairoch, 1993). In contrast to the EC-IUBMB classification, this structure-based system does not assign EC numbers (i.e. the substrate specificity and the type of reaction being catalysed). Thus a single CAZy family can include enzymes which act on various substrates. It also allows inclusion of proteins of unknown function, avoiding any premature prediction of possible enzyme activity (Cantarel et al., 2009). The CAZy classification is based on structurally related catalytic and carbohydrate-binding domains of proteins and comprises five classes: (i) glycosyl hydrolases (GHs, including the enzymes discussed above as glycosidases and glycanases); (ii) glycosyltransferases (GTs, principally those mentioned as catalysing ‘irreversible’ transglycosylation); (iii) polysaccharide lyases (PLs); (iv) carbohydrate esterases (CEs); and (v) carbohydrate-binding modules (CBMs). Sometimes the folding of proteins provides a better basis for classification than a simple one-dimensional sequence and allows hierarchical categorization (clustering) of different families whose members seem to be structurally related. This phenomenon can be observed in the class of glycanohydrolases, where some families are grouped into ‘clans’ (clan GH-A to GH-N) defined by similarities in 3D structure (fold) and a highly conserved catalytic domain and catalytic mechanism, despite differences in complete amino acid sequences (Henrissat and Bairoch, 1996). The CAZy database provides numerous options for searching through the individual categories such as family, organism, or protein name, EC number, and mechanism. Despite the availability of these options, an initial search for required data may fail after the relevant category has been selected. For example, searching for enzyme activity defined by the protein name ‘β-xylosidase’ will reveal 501 hits, but displaying only 10 results per page. Clicking on the next 10 records yields the error message ‘résultats de la recherche’. A user would then intuitively use another option, such as entering the EC number (in this case EC 3.2.1.37), which, however, provides the same hits and the same problem. As an alternative, a user can try the Glycoside Hydrolase (GH) family classification, Plant cell-wall enzymes | 3527 Table 1. Synopsis of databases providing information on plant cell wall polysaccharide-modifying enzymes and/or their genes Database name Description Web link Data available on: Notes PS PE GO EF IUBMB Enzyme Nomenclature Enzyme Commission (EC) classification of enzymes by the reactions they catalyse Comprehensive enzyme information system www.chem.qmul. – ac.uk/iubmb/enzyme + – – Includes brief description of the enzyme-catalysed reaction www.brendaenzymes.org – + – + CAZy Carbohydrate Active enZyme database www.cazy.org + + – – IntEnz/ENZYME Integrated relational enzyme database/swissprot enzyme nomenclature database Sib bioinformatics resource portal Protein Data Bank database www.ebi.ac.uk/ + intenz; http://enzyme. expasy.org http://expasy.org + + – – Summarizes detailed characteristics of enzymes/functional gene products abstracted from the literature; enzymes classified according to the EC list. New sequence-based classification system introduced; enzymes categorized into the families; information on sequences through the GenBank and UniProtKB link Describes type of enzyme based on the recommendations of the EC; gene sequences and ontology provided through the link to UniProtKB + + www.rcsb.org + + + Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes database European Bioinformatics Institute databases Annotated protein sequence database Hierarchical catalogue of eukaryotic orthologues National Center for Biotechnology Information database Plant Proteome Database for Arabidopsis thaliana and maize (Zea mays) www.kegg.jp + + + www.ebi.ac.uk/ services www.uniprot.org + + + + + + http://cegg.unige.ch/ + orthodb4 www.ncbi.nlm.nih. + gov - + + + http://ppdb.tc.cornell. + edu + + http://plantcyc.org – + – http://labs.plantbio. cornell.edu/XTH http://bioweb.ucr. edu/Cellwall + – – CWN Plant Metabolic Network database Database of XTHs from Arabidopsis, tomato and rice Cell-Wall Navigator database + – – AmiGO Gene ontology database http://amigo.geneon- + tology.org The Arabidopsis Information www.arabidopsis.org + Resource database – + – + PlantTribes Floral Genome Project database http://fgp.bio.psu. edu/tribedb/10_ genomes/index.pl + – + pDAWG An integrated database for plant cell-wall genes – + GHATAbase Glycosyl Hydrolase And Transglycosylase Activity database http://csbl1.bmb.uga. + edu/pDAWG/species. php http://www. – homepages.ed.ac.uk/ sfry/GHATAbase.html + – + Lists many scientific databases such as PROSIT, ENZYME, OMA basic etc., easily searchable; provides access to software tools – Provides information on 3D structures and similarities, ligands, methods, etc. – Consists of sub-databases categorized according to the information available on systems, genomics and chemistry – Provides access to biological databases such as ENA, IntAct, InterPro – Easily searchable, most information linked to the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) – Lists eukaryotic orthologous protein-coding genes; no record on plant proteins but many on fungal carbohydrate-active enzymes – Supports access to a variety of enzyme and nucleotide databases, genome-specific resources etc.; provides tools for sequence analysis and 3D structure display. + Stores experimental data from proteome and mass spectrometry basic analysis, curated information about protein function, protein properties and subcellular localization; predicted protein can be searched for experimental information. – Contains curated information from the literature and computational analy ses about the genes, enzymes, compounds, reactions and pathways. – Web page proposes and standardizes the XTH nomenclature; a list of new gene names with links to the NCBI sequences also provided. – Contains gene families that are involved in sugar substrate generation and primary cell-wall metabolism; linked to sources of the complete genome sequences of Arabidopsis thaliana and Oryza sativa and to those of UniProt and NCBI. – Includes all manual gene product annotations and electronic annotations from all databases other than UniProtKB; possibility to set up a filter. – Includes the complete genome sequence of Arabidopsis in addition to gene product information, metabolism, genome maps, genetic and physical markers and seed stocks. – A classification system for plant proteins based on cluster analyses of the inferred proteomes of 9 sequenced angiosperms; includes information about domains, traditional gene family names and unified common terms – Contains 19 complete plant genomes including 12 from algae; linked to the Pfam database (includes annotations and additional family information); provides data on subcellular localization and phylogeny. + A list of individual enzyme activities for which evidence was obtained in plant protein extracts; readily searchable; valuable resource for selecting plant organs from whichto extract and study enzymes of interest. Provides notes and comments about the reaction products. BRENDA ExPASy PDB KEGG EMBL-EBI UniProtKB OrthoDB NCBI PPDB PMN XTH World TAIR EF, Enzyme features; GO, Gene ontology/annotations; PE, plant enzymes; PS, protein sequences. 3528 | Franková and Fry under which the EC numbers are associated with individual GH families. In the case of EC 3.2.1.37, ten GH families are attributed to this enzyme activity and users are left with their own manual search to find the necessary information, such as the organism source. Each GH family contains entries categorized into archea, bacteria, eukaryota. The problem may occur when users wish to find plant-specific entries that are included simply under ‘eukaryota’. Based on structural similarities, each GH family can include not only proteins with defined enzyme activity, but also peptide fragments and predicted or unknown proteins. These data are supported by references (available through NCBI or UniProtKB), which are sometimes ‘unpublished data’ or ‘direct submissions’ (to the online database). Even enzyme activities with defined name (and/or EC number) are sometimes only ‘predicted’, so there is no evidence at transcript or protein level for the corresponding protein. Such information can be misleading since a user would intuitively trust an entry bearing a given enzyme name or EC number, believing that enzyme’s existence has been proven at the protein level (in vivo or in vitro). Nevertheless, CAZy remains the only complex database on enzymes which form, cleave, or reconstitute bonds in carbohydrates. From the whole range of CAZy groups, approximately 22 families seem to be associated with enzymes that may postsynthetically modify the plant cell wall (Table 2; note that families or enzyme activities that do not include any plant member are omitted). Plant glycosidases (Fig. 2A, B) are mostly grouped in GH families 1, 2, 3, 27, 29, 31, 35, 36, 38, 51, and 95, while plant glycanases (Fig. 2C) fall into GH families 2, 5, 9, 10, 16, 17, 28, and 81. However, the boundaries between glycosidase and glycanases GH families is not always strictly determined; for example, family GH2 includes both exo- and endo-acting members. Dedicated reversible transglycanases are restricted to family GH16. In contrast, dedicated transglycosidases do not seem to exist in any GH family, although families GH1 and 31 contain bifunctional enzymes with both glycosidase and transglycosidase activity (Table 2). Transglycosylases or transglycosylating glycosyl hydrolases? Most enzyme databases use the term ‘glycosyltransferase’ for enzymes that catalyse the transfer of sugar residues, usually one at a time, from an activated donor substrate to a specific acceptor substrate, forming a new glycosidic bond. Such enzymes can also be described as aglycone-glycoside synthases, oligosaccharide synthases, and polysaccharide synthases. The donor substrate is usually a nucleoside diphospho- or monophospho-sugar or a sugar 1-phosphate (Lairson et al., 2008; Palcic, 2011), and since the bond broken in the donor is more energetic than the newly formed one, the transglycosylation reaction is usually essentially irreversible. The reaction may affect the acceptor’s mass, solubility, transport, and bioactivity (Ross et al., 2001). A second group of enzymes catalysing (reversible) transglycosylation, which is not prominently distinguished in enzyme databases and calls for an individual search (and a lot of patience), comprises glycosyl hydrolases that also possess appreciable transglycosylation activity. Such transglycosidase and transglycanase activities are known mostly from fungi and bacteria. If one searches for plant transglycanases and transglycosidases (not NDP-sugar-dependent), one would find fructan:fructan 1-fructosyltransferase (a transβ-fructanase) and sucrose:fructan 6-fructosyltransferase (a trans-β-fructosidase), disproportionating enzyme (D-enzyme or 4-α-glucanotransferase) and amylo-(1,4–1,6)-transglucosylase (branching or Q-enzyme, a trans-α-glucanase which converts amylose to amylopectin) (ExPASy, BRENDA). A more intensive search for cell-wall-modifying transglycanases and transglycosidases reveals entries on XET (xyloglucan endotransglucosylase) and trans-β-mannanase (mannan endotransglycosylase), mostly on the CAZy and BRENDA servers. Both trans-β-mannanase and XET are classified among glycosyl hydrolases (families GH5 and GH16, respectively; www.cazy.org) because their mechanism of action and structural affiliations are different from those classed as glycosyltransferases (GT families). Other than XET and transβ-mannanase, no records on plant wall-related enzymes that catalyse transglycosylation are yet available in online database directories, so data on transglycosylation activities (discussed further in the sections ‘Inverting matters’ and ‘Predicted activities vs. biological roles of GH families’) are currently available only in original articles. Nevertheless, further new homo-transglycosidase and homo- and hetero-transglycanase activities are being discovered in plants (Hrmova et al., 1998, 2006, 2007; Fry et al., 2008a; Kosík et al., 2010; Franková and Fry, 2011) although the sequences of the corresponding proteins are not always known. Mechanisms of enzymic hydrolysis and transglycosylation The enzyme-catalysed hydrolysis of glycosidic bonds can take place via either of two reaction mechanisms: single- or double-displacement. The single-displacement mechanism proceeds in one step through an oxocarbenium ion-like transition state with the assistance of two carboxylic acids at the active site (usually glutamic and/or aspartic acid; McCarter and Withers, 1994). One carboxylic acid (acting as a catalytic base) is required for nucleophilic attack on water, while the second (acting as a catalytic acid) brings about the cleavage of the glycosidic bond (Koshland, 1953; Sinnott, 1990; Withers, 2001). The result of such a mechanism is the inversion of anomeric configuration (e.g. bond cleaved = α-lfucosyl–R; initial products = β-l-fucose + R–OH), and this defines ‘inverting glycosidases’. Regardless of the initial product formed, the sugar released (in aqueous solution) soon ends up as an equilibrium mixture of, for example, α-l-fucose and β-l-fucose, as a result of mutarotation. The double-displacement mechanism is achieved in two steps: (i) the formation of an intermediate containing a glycosyl–enzyme ester bond; and (ii) its hydrolysis (Sinnott, 1990; Davies and Henrissat, 1995). Both steps proceed via an oxocarbenium ion-like transition state and also require Plant cell-wall enzymes | 3529 Table 2. Distribution of plant cell-wall-remodelling enzymes in CAZy families Data on plant enzymes were laboriously extracted from the very long list of plant, fungal, and animal CAZymes, all of which were included in the one group ‘Eukaryota’. Unnamed/predicted protein products with unknown function and fragments are not included; families or enzyme activities that do not include any plant member are omitted. Family Catalytic Enzyme domain activity Mechanism Transglyco- Reference on EC sylation transglycosylation number activity Plant sources of the protein with known function/activity GH1 β-Glucosidase Retaining + β-Mannosidase Retaining ND β-Mannosidase Mannosylglycoprotein endo-β-mannosidase Retaining ND – 3.2.1.25 Arabidopsis thaliana, Avena sativa, Brassica napus, Carapichea ipecuanha, Carica papaya, Cicer arietinum, Consolida orientalis, Corbicula japonica, Hordeum vulgare, Lotus japonicus, Malus × domestica, Manihot esculenta, Medicago truncatula, Olea europea, Oryza sativa, Pinus contorta, Solanum lycopersicum, Trifolium repens, Vitis vinifera, Zea mays Hordeum vulgare, Oncidium Gower Ramsey, Oryza sativa, Solanum lycopersicum Brassica oleracea Retaining ND – 3.2.1.152 Arabidopsis thaliana, Lilium longiflorum β-Galactosidase Retaining ND – 3.2.1.23 Arabidopsis thaliana α-Arabinofuranosidase /β-1,4-xylosidase Retaining ND – 3.2.1.55 /3.2.1.37 β-1,4-Xylosidase Retaining ND – 3.2.1.37 β-Glucosidase Retaining ND – 3.2.1.21 Retaining β-Glucosidase (preferred substrates are polysaccharides, thus ‘exo-β-glucanase’) Retaining β-Mannanase, ND – 3.2.1.– Actinidia deliciosa, Arabidopsis thaliana, Solanum lycopersicum, Fragaria × ananassa, Hordeum vulgare, Malus × domestica, Medicago sativa ssp. varia, Medicago truncatula, Pyrus pyrifolia, Raphanus sativus Arabidopsis thaliana, Camellia sinensis, Hordeum vulgare, Medicago truncatula, Populus tremula × alba, Solanum lycopersicum, Zea mays Gossypium hirsutum, Nicotiana tabacum, Tropaeolum majus Hordeum vulgare + Hrmova et al. (2006); 2.4.1.Schröder et al. (2006) /2.4.1.78 GH2 (β/α)8 (β/α)8 GH3 GH5 (β/α)8 trans-β-mannanase Crombie et al. (1998); 3.2.1.21 Opassiri et al. (2003) 3.2.1.25 GH9 (α /α)6 β-1,4-Glucanase (cellulase) Inverting ND – 3.2.1.4 GH10 (β/α)8 β-1,4-Xylanase, trans-β-xylanase Retaining +. Johnston et al. (2013) 3.2.1.8 Hordeum vulgare, Coffea arabica, Daucus carota, Glycine max, Lactuca sativa, Solanum lycopersicum Arabidopsis thaliana, Brassica napus, Capsella rubella, Capsicum annuum, Citrus sinensis, Colocasia esculenta, Cucumis melo, Dimocarpus longan, Fragaria × ananassa, Glycine max, Gossypium barbadense, Gossypium herbaceum, Gossypium hirsutum, Hordeum vulgare, Malus × domestica Mangifera inica, Medicago truncatula, Nicotiana tabacum, Oryza officinalis, Oryza sativa, Persea americana, Phaseolus vulgaris, Picea glauca, Picea sitchensis, Pinus radiata, Pinus taeda, Pisum sativum, Populus alba, Populus alba × grandidentata, Populus tremuloides, Prunus persica, Pyrus communis, Saccharum hybrid cultivar R570, Triticum aestivum, Vitis vinifera, Sambucus nigra, Solanum lycopersicum, Sorghum bicolor Arabidopsis thaliana, Carica papaya, Hordeum vulgare, Nicotiana tabacum, Oryza sativa, Zea mays 3530 | Franková and Fry Table 2. (Continued) Family Catalytic Enzyme domain activity Mechanism Transglyco- Reference on EC sylation transglycosylation number activity Plant sources of the protein with known function/activity GH16 Xyloglucan endotransglucosylase Retaining + Xu et al. (1995); Campbell and Braam, 1999) 2.4.1.207 Xyloglucan endohydrolase Retaining + 3.2.1.151 β-1,3-Glucanase Retaining ND De Silva et al. (1993); Fanutti et al. (1993); Tabuchi et al. (2001); Baumann et al. (2007); Zhu et al. (2012) – Actinidia deliciosa, Annona cherimola, Arabidopsis thaliana, Asparagus officinalis, Beta vulgaris, Betula pendula, Brassica oleracea var. botrytis, Brassica rapa, Capsicum annuum, Carica papaya, Cenchrus americanus, Chrysanthemum × morifolium, Dahlia pinnata, Daucus carota, Fagus sylvatica, Festuca pratensis, Gerbera hybrid cultivar, Hordeum vulgare, Litchi chinensis, Medicago truncatula, Musa acuminate, Nicotiana tabacum, Oryza sativa, Pisum sativum, Populus euphratica, Pyrus communis, Pyrus pyrifolia, Rosa chinensi, Shorea parvifolia, Solanum lycopersicum, Striga asiatica, Triticum aestivum, Vitis labrusca × vinifera Arabidopsis thaliana, Tropaeolum majus, Vigna angularis 3.2.1.39 ‘Lichenase’ (MLG-specific β-1,4-glucanase) Retaining ND – 3.2.1.73 GH17 β-Jelly roll (β/α)8 Arabidopsis thaliana, Atropa belladonna, Avena sativa, Beta vulgaris ssp. vulgaris, Brassica rapa, Cicer arietinum, Cichorium intybus × endivia, Citrus clementina × reticulata, Citrus jambhiri, Citrus sinensis, Glycine max, Gossypium hirsutum, Hevea brasiliensis, Hordeum vulgare, Medicago sativa, Musa acuminata, Musa paradisiaca, Nicotiana tabacum, Olea europaea, Oryza sativa, Phaseolus vulgaris, Pisum sativum, Salix gilgiana, Solanum lycopersicum, Solanum tuberosum, Triticum aestivum, Vitis vinifera, Zea mays Avena sativa, Hordeum vulgare, Nicitiana plumbaginifolia, Oryza sativa, Triticum aestivum GH 27 (β/α)8 α-Galactosidase Retaining ND – 3.2.1.22 GH28 β-helix α-Galacturonidase (‘exopolygalacturonase’) Galacturonanase (‘endopolygalacturonase’, pectinase) Inverting ND – 3.2.1.67 Inverting ND – 3.2.1.15 α-1,3-Fucosidase, α-1,4-Fucosidase Retaining ND – 3.2.1.51 α-Glucosidase, α-Xylosidase Retaining + Sampedro et al. (2010) 3.2.1.20 /3.2.1.- Arabidopsis thaliana α-Xylosidase Retaining ND – 3.2.1.- Oryza sativa, Tropaeolum majus GH29 GH31 (β/α)8 Coffea arabica, Coffea canephora, Cucumis sativus, Glycine max, Helianthus annuus, Oryza sativa, Pisum sativum Arabidopsis thaliana, Brassica rapa ssp. campestris, Oryza brachyantha, Oryza coarctata, Oryza minuta, Zea mays Arabidopsis thaliana, Brassica napus, Brassica rapa ssp. campestris, Carica papaya, Cucumis melo, Daucus carota, Eucalyptus globulus, Fragaria chiloensis, Fragaria × ananassa, Glycine max, Gossypium barbadense, Gossypium hirsutum, Hypericum perforatum, Lilium longiflorum, Medicago sativa, Musa acuminata, Nicotiana tabacum, Oncidium Gower Ramsey, Oryza brachyantha, Platanus × acerifolia, Prunus armeniaca, Prunus domestica ssp. insititia, Prunus persica, Pyrus communis, Salix gilgiana, Solanum lycopersicum, Vitis vinifera Arabidopsis thaliana Plant cell-wall enzymes | 3531 Table 2. (Continued) Family Catalytic Enzyme domain activity Mechanism Transglyco- Reference on EC sylation transglycosylation number activity Plant sources of the protein with known function/activity GH35 (β/α)8 β-Galactosidase Retaining (inferred) ND – 3.2.1.23 GH36 (β/α)8 α-Galactosidase Retaining ND – 3.2.1.22 GH38 (β/α)7 α-Mannosidase Retaining ND – 3.2.1.24 GH51 (β/α)8 α-Arabinofuranosidase Retaining ND – 3.2.1.55 ND – 3.2.1.55 /3.2.1.37 GH81 ND α-Arabinofuranosidase, Retaining β-xylosidase Inverting β-1,3-Glucanase Arabidopsis thaliana, Asparagus officinalis, Brassica oleracea, Capsicum annuum, Carica papaya, Cicer arietinum, Citrus sinensis, Coffea arabica, Fragaria × ananassa, Glycine max, Gossypium hirsutum, Hordeum vulgare, Mangifera indica, Nicotiana tabacum, Oryza sativa, Persea americana, Petunia × hybrida, Prunus persica, Pyrus communis, Pyrus pyrifolia, Solanum lycopersicum, Triticum monococcum, Vigna radiata, Vitis vinifera, Ziziphus jujuba Arabidopsis thaliana, Cucumis melo, Cucumis sativus, Oryza sativa, Pisum sativum, Zea mays Arabidopsis thaliana, Capsicum annuum, Medicago truncatula, Oryza sativa Arabidopsis thaliana, Carica papaya, Fragaria × ananassa,Gunnera manicata, Hordeum vulgare, Malus × domestica, Medicago truncatula, Prunus persica, Pyrus communis, Pyrus pyrifolia, Solanum lycopersicum Arabidopsis thaliana GH95 (α/α)6 α-1,2-Fucosidase Inverting CE6 (α/β/α)Sandwich Xylan acetylesterase CE8 β-Helix CE13 PL1 ND – 3.2.1.39 Arabidopsis thaliana, Glycine max ND – 3.2.1.63 Deacetylation – – 3.1.1.72 Arabidopsis thaliana, Lilium longiflorum, Oryza sativa Arabidopsis thaliana, Hordeum vulgare Pectin methylesterase Demethyl esterification – – 3.1.1.11 (α/β/α)Sandwich Pectin acetylesterase Deacetylation – – 3.1.1.- Parallel β-helix Pectate lyase β-Elimination – – 4.2.2.2 ND, not determined. Allium cepa, Arabidopsis halleri ssp. halleri, Arabidopsis thaliana, Brassica napus, Brassica oleracea, Brassica rapa ssp. pekinensis, Capsicum annuum, Citrus sinensis, Fragaria × ananassa, Linum usitatissimum, Lycoris aurea, Medicago truncatula, Nicotiana benthamiana, Nicotiana plumbaginifolia, Nicotiana tabacum, Olea europea, Oncidium Gower Ramsey, Oryza rufipogon, Oryza sativa, Petunia integrifolia subsp. inflata, Phaseolus vulgaris, Physcomitrella patens, Picea abies, Pisum sativum, Populus tremula × tremuloides, Prunus persica, Pyrus communis, Salix gilgiana, Sesbania rostrata, Silene latifolia ssp. alba, Solanum lycopersicum, Solanum tuberosum, Vitis riparia, Vitis vinifera Lactuca sativa, Litchi chinensis, Medicago truncatula, Oryza sativa, Populus trichocarpa, Vitis vinifera, Vigna radiata var. radiata, Sorghum bicolor Arabidopsis thaliana, Carica papaya, Dianthus caryophyllus, Fragaria chiloensis, Gossypium barbadense, Gossypium herbaceum, Gossypium hirsutum, Gossypium raimondii, Hevea brasiliensis, Lilium longiflorum, Malus × domestica, Mangifera indica, Medicago sativa, Musa acuminate, Nicotiana tabacum, Populus tremula × Populus tremuloides, Prunus persica, Rosa × borboniana, Salix gilgiana, Solanum lycopersicum, Zinnia violacea 3532 | Franková and Fry two acidic amino acid residues—one acting as a nucleophile and the second as an acid/base catalyst. In the first (glycosylation) step, a nucleophilic residue attacks the anomeric centre (defined in Fig. 3) allowing displacement of the aglycone and formation of the glycosyl–enzyme complex. At the same time, the carboxylic group (functioning as an acid catalyst) protonates the glycosidic oxygen (defined in Fig. 3), cleaving the original glycosidic bond in the substrate. The glycosyl– enzyme ester bond is then hydrolysed by water in the second (deglycosylation) step. The same carboxylic group (now acting as a base) deprotonates the water molecule, forming a new –OH group. Enzymes operating via this double-displacement mechanism are called ‘retaining’ as overall they maintain the initial conformation at the anomeric carbon (e.g. bond cleaved β-d-glucosyl–R; products β-d-glucose + R–OH). Retaining hydrolases of interest in connection with plant cell walls include those in CAZy families GH1–3, 5, 10, 16, 17, 27, 29, 31, 35, 36, 38, and 51 (Table 2). Inverting GH families of interest include GH9, 28, 81, and 95 (www.cazy.org). Inverting matters Unlike inverting hydrolases, which catalyse only hydrolysis, some retaining glycosylhydrolases can also participate appreciably in transglycosylation reactions (Koshland, 1953; Sinnott, 1990; Scigelova et al., 1999; Moracci et al., 2001; Tramice et al., 2007). This is due to their ability to form a glycosyl– enzyme complex which can then be attacked by an acceptor substrate other than water, generating a new glycosidic bond instead of releasing a reducing sugar as hydrolysis product. This knowledge has been applied to the design and development of biotechnologically improved enzymes. New mutants of retaining glycosylhydrolases (including those from plants; Hrmova et al., 2002; Hommalai et al., 2007; Piens et al., 2007) were created by selective intervention in their ‘hydrolytic domain’ such as the replacement of a catalytic nucleophile (e.g. Glu231 or Glu235 of the barley β-1,3-glucanase and Cellulomonas β-1,4-xylanase respectively) by an inert, nonnucleophilic residue (e.g. Ser, Gly, Ala, or Cys; Withers, 2001; Hrmova et al., 2002; Kim et al., 2006). These modified glycosylhydrolases possessed hitherto unknown synthetic abilities, generating novel glycoconjugates, and have been termed glycosynthases (Mackenzie et al., 1998; Moracci et al., 2001). The mutant glycosynthase itself cannot form a glycosyl– enzyme intermediate complex because it lacks a catalytic nucleophile. However, the formation of a glycosyl–enzyme intermediate can be mimicked by the use of glycosyl fluorides as donors, which possess an anomeric configuration opposite to that of the natural substrate and a fluorine atom as a good leaving group (comparable to the UDP in UDPglucose; Withers, 2001; Kim et al., 2006; Kang et al., 2007). Oligosaccharide fluorides were successfully employed in the synthesis of long oligosaccharides by mutant versions of plant hydrolases such as rice β-glucosidase, Populus XET, and barley β-1,3-d-glucanases (Hrmova et al., 2002; Hommalai et al., 2007; Piens et al., 2007). Owing to the low cost of glycoconjugate synthesis, the application of glycosylhydrolases modified by genetic engineering has been put into practice and often prevails over the traditional chemical synthesis and glycosyltransferase approach (the use of natural enzymes and expensive sugar-nucleotides; Withers, 2001; Piens et al., 2007). However, screens for natural plant hydrolases capable of significant transglycosidase or transglycanase activity at low substrate concentrations are also of interest as they are accessible from a wide diversity of plant taxa and are relatively cheap. Thus, glycosynthases together with ‘cheap’ and widespread native retaining hydrolases represent a powerful synthetic tool for preparing new compounds with possible application in the carbohydrate and pharmaceutical industries. Transglycosylation catalysed by retaining hydrolases may in many cases be observed only at high acceptor substrate concentrations, capable of competing with water (the ‘acceptor substrate’ in hydrolysis). Such transglycosylation is often described as ‘mechanistic’, and may be denigrated if unphysiologically high substrate concentrations are required, or even overlooked because hydrolysis (which is irreversible) will, in the end, inevitably exceed reversible transglycosylation during prolonged enzyme assays by tapping off constituents of the interconverting glycoside pool: Of the 156 CAZy families, only 22 contain plant enzymes that appear likely to post-synthetically modify plant cellwall polysaccharides (Table 2), namely families GH1, 2, 3, 5, 9, 10, 16, 17, 27, 28, 29, 31, 35, 36, 38, 51, 81, and 95, CE6, 8, and 13, and PL1. As mentioned above in the section ‘Transglycosylases or transglycosylating glycosyl hydrolases?’, the CAZy database reports the transglycosylating ability of only two plant ‘GH’ families: GH16 and GH5, represented by XET and trans-β-mannanase activities, respectively. The sequences and 3D structures of these two types of wall-acting enzyme place them in GH (not GT) families, but their activities are associated solely or primarily with transglycosylation (Table 2). The ability to catalyse transglycosylation is also recorded for members of some fungal and bacterial GH families but for no other plant GH families. However, some additional retaining plant GH CAZymes listed in Table 2 have been found experimentally to catalyse not only hydrolysis but also transglycosylation reactions in the presence of moderate acceptor substrate concentrations, e.g. 1–5 mM (Crombie et al., 1998; Opassiri et al., 2003; Schröder et al., 2006; Sampedro et al., 2010; Johnston et al., 2013), although this is not recorded in the CAZy database. Such concentrations are on the verge of being low enough to be considered ‘physiological’, and the enzymes involved Plant cell-wall enzymes | 3533 might also perform transglycosylation within the wall matrix. Examples include soyabean β-glucosidase, fenugreek endoβ-mannanases, and clover α-galactosidase, which catalyse in-vitro transglycosylation reactions at ~0.2–40 mM acceptor substrate concentrations (Williams et al., 1977; Coulombel et al., 1981; Nari et al., 1983a,b). Moreover, recently reported trans-β-xylosidase, trans-β-xylanase, trans-β-galactosidase, and trans-α-xylosidase activities were detected with 0.5, 0.5, 1, and 0.016 mM oligosaccharide substrates respectively (Franková and Fry, 2011, 2012a). These concentrations can be regarded as low and close to (or even lower than) those occurring in muro, since cellulose and hemicelluloses constitute about 20–30% and up to 20%, respectively, of the primary cell-wall dry weight (Varner and Lin, 1989). The discovery of novel transglycosylase activities in plants suggests (Popper and Fry, 2008) that hemicelluloses and pectins in the wall matrix may not be linked only by non-covalent bonds, as was assumed in earlier cell-wall models (Northcote, 1972; Monro et al., 1976). The plant cell wall itself is not equipped with either a pool of activated substrates (e.g. NDP-sugars) or the enzymic machinery (glycosyltransferases) to synthesize polysaccharides de novo (Schröder et al., 2009). Therefore, the manufacture of new glycosidic bonds within the cell wall (e.g. during wall integration of new polymers, restructuring of existing material, and bonding of polysaccharides to each other) can only be accomplished by means of transglycosylation reactions. It might be only a matter of time before other transglycosylation activities are discovered in plants and accepted as being non-‘mechanistic’ in the context of their possible biological roles in vivo. Plant-centred, but no plant-specific, CAZy families No ‘pioneer’ CAZy family found only in plants All the GH and CE families that include plant cell-wallremodelling CAZymes also have representatives in archaea, bacteria, viruses, protists, and animals. In other words, there is no protein family containing only plant CAZymes. However, regarding the metabolism of xyloglucan (which is unique to plants), two enzyme activities (XET and XEH) seem to be highly conserved in plants. Both activities fall into family GH16, which also includes keratin-sulphate endo1,4-β-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.103), endo-1,3-β-glucanase (EC 3.2.1.39), endo-(1,3-1,4)-β-glucanase (‘cellulase’; EC 3.2.1.4), lichenase (EC 3.2.1.73), β-agarase (EC 3.2.1.81), and κ-carrageenase (EC 3.2.1.83). Despite having the activities listed above, the XTH branch of family GH16 can be regarded as a plant-specific CAZy family, since XET- and XEH-active GH16 members are found only in plants. Nevertheless, a few members of other families (mainly GH5, 7, 12, 44 and 74) show XEH activity (Gilbert et al., 2008; Vlasenko et al., 2010; Ariza et al., 2011). These 1,4-β-glucan-degrading enzymes (called ‘cellulases’, albeit sometimes highly xyloglucan-specific) are bacterial or fungal and their possible ability to catalyse transfer with xyloglucan was not reported. Other CAZy families which are best represented among plant wallrelated enzymes are the carbohydrate esterase families CE8 and CE13. The sequences falling into these two families were predicted pectin methylesterases and pectin acetylesterases. The importance of pectin methylesterase (PME) in planta is implied by the fact that Arabidopsis contains at least 79 putative PME genes (Markovič and Janeček, 2004). For example, the CAZy database lists about 65 records for Arabidopsis PMEs and 2 for fragments thereof (www.cazy.org). Even though all these sequences are included in the PME family, only a few of them have been screened for a functional PME product and possible biophysicochemical properties (for details see Richard et al., 1994, 1996; Francis et al., 2006). Likewise, out of 66 entries for Arabidopsis available on the UniProtKB server, 14 represent ‘putative’ and 44 ‘probable’ PMEs, indicating that the actual enzyme activity was tested in very few cases. Predicted activities vs. biological roles of GH families Both the spatial and temporal regulation of gene expression and variation in enzyme activities are routinely monitored by: (i) quantification of mRNAs (by in-situ hybridization and gene-specific microarrays); (ii) measurement of protein steady-state levels; (iii) tissue printing (hybridization, immunohistochemistry); and (iv) the study of mutants with overexpressed or knocked-down genes. Sometimes mRNA levels do not faithfully predict actual enzyme activities (because there may be post-transcriptional regulation), which makes the interpretation of biological roles more difficult. Likewise, overexpressing or silencing of selected genes may not produce any morphological phenotype in transgenic plants, especially when the gained/lost function can be compensated for by non-affected isoforms or other regulatory mechanisms. In such cases, a reliable ‘wet biochemical’ approach (e.g. sensitive enzyme assays, histochemistry, polysaccharide content and composition analysis, reducing sugar assays) becomes an indispensable complement to functional genomics. The activity of an archetypal plant transglycanase – XET – is associated with various key biological functions (cellwall loosening and expansion, fruit softening, germination, reserve mobilization, secondary wall deposition, wall assembly and strengthening) and is attributed to multiple isoforms. For example, the Glycine max, Arabidopsis lyrata, A. thaliana, and Zea mays genomes are equipped with 64, 39, 33, and 32 XTH genes, respectively, that were predicted to encode functional gene products (Michel et al., 2001; Nishitani, 2005; Eklöf and Brumer, 2010). Based on the available genome data, the XTH enzymes and their genes have been grouped into a phylogenetic tree which is divided into three clades (I, II, and IIIb) expected to exhibit only XET activity (Eklöf and Brumer, 2010), and a fourth (IIIa) assumed to work predominantly as XEH. Their ability to fulfil this role will discussed in the section ‘Xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolase’. Apart from the action of ‘dedicated’ transglycosylases (XTHs with XET activity), many other ‘part-time’ transglycosylation activities have been reported in plants. So far, only six plant glycosyl hydrolases with known protein sequences have been demonstrated to catalyse glycosyl transfer: rice Bglu β-glucosidase (Opassiri et al., 2003) and nasturtium 3534 | Franková and Fry β-glucosidase (Crombie et al., 1998), both showing trans-βglucosidase activity; Arabidopsis AtXyl1 α-xylosidase (with trans-α-xylosidase activity; Sampedro et al., 2010), barley HvMAN1 β-mannanase and tomato LeMan4 mannanase (with trans-β-mannanase activity; Hrmova et al., 2006; Schröder et al., 2006); and papaya CpaEXY1 β-xylanase (with trans-β-xylanase activity; Johnston et al., 2013). Their function, regulation, and activity were examined not only at the transcriptional level but also at the protein level (enzyme assays and reaction product analysis). Based on structural features, they were all predicted to function as glycosyl hydrolases (Table 2). However, the importance of ‘cutting and pasting’ glycosidic bonds in vitro and its relevance in vivo was highlighted. Fig. 4 depicts proposed biological functions of plant transglycosylases, including those whose protein sequence is not known (section ‘Inverting matters’). Gene expression does not guarantee enzyme action in vivo Newly discovered enzyme activities call for subsequent protein purification and genetic studies which might reveal the identity of proteins responsible for the reactions catalysed. Equally, the discovery of expressed genes calls for enzymological and biological studies of the reactions which their translation products may catalyse. The finding that a given gene is transcribed such that its mRNA can be detected, via cDNA analysis, in a particular cell at a particular time, and that the gene in question fits in a particular CAZy class, does not prove that that gene’s product is capable of catalysing the CAZy-predicted reaction, still less that it actually does so in vivo. These issues require testing experimentally. There is an important distinction between enzyme activity (e.g. assayed in vitro, under optimized conditions, with substrates arbitrarily chosen by the experimenter) and enzyme action (as occurring in muro, with natural substrates). A protein might fail to exhibit its CAZy-predicted activity in vitro for any of several reasons, such as: (i) badly chosen conditions (pH, ionic strength, cofactor availability), not accurately mimicking those occurring in vivo; (ii) enzyme denaturation during extraction; (iii) heterologously produced protein (e.g. in Escherichia coli or Pichia) lacking correct post-translational modifications, e.g. N-glycosylation; and (iv) the true substrate of the enzyme may not be as predicted by CAZy. This last uncertainty can readily be explored by assays on pure (e.g. heterologously expressed) protein. In many cases, the enzyme is indeed active, although there are exceptions. For example the protein encoded by a putative plant α-fucosidase gene showed no α-fucosidase activity in vitro (Tarragó et al., 2003). As a second example, plant bifunctional α-arabinofuranosidase/β-xylosidase (e.g. MsXyl1 of Medicago, ARA-I/XYL of barley, and AtBXL1 of Arabidopsis; Lee et al., 2003; Xiong et al., 2007; Arsovski et al., 2009; see section ‘The mutation/RNAi approach’) is placed in CAZy family GH3, which mainly contains β-glucosidases, β-glucanases and β-xylosidases. In this case, the unexpected α-arabinofuranosidase activity could have been easily overlooked as plant α-arabinosidases belong to GH51. A third example, Arabidopsis AtFuc1 α-fucosidase, was primarily thought to be acting on α-1,2 fucosyl linkages other than those of xyloglucan (de la Torre et al., 2002). Later, it was reported that AtFuc1 hydrolyses both 3- and 4-linked fucoses but not 2-linked α-fucose nor the α-fucose that is 1,3-linked to the innermost GlcNAc residue of glycoproteins (Zeleny et al., 2006). Thus the enzyme was moved from family GH95 to GH29. The ‘true’ α-1,2-fucosidase (GH95) associated with xyloglucan metabolism is encoded by AtFXG1 (also AXY8 or AtFuc95A) and exhibits activity against XXFG and 2′-fucosyllactose (de la Torre et al., 2002; Günl et al., 2011). Like AtFuc1, it is inactive on pNP-α-Fuc. More worryingly, even if a protein does possess a given enzymic activity on soluble substrates in vitro, it might fail to exert any corresponding action in vivo owing to multiple reasons such as: (i) the endogenous substrate may be inaccessible to endogenous enzyme, for example because the putative substrate (e.g. mannan) is shrouded by some other polysaccharide (e.g. pectin) (‘masking’; Marcus et al., 2010); (ii) the enzyme may be localized in different cells, or in different parts of the cell, from the putative polysaccharide substrate; (iii) the apoplast of the cells in question may have an inappropriate pH for action of the enzyme; (iv) activators, for example cofactors, may be absent in vivo; and (v) inhibitors may be present in vivo. For any of these reasons, in-vitro assays of enzyme action may not correctly predict in-vivo action, and one may be led to false conclusions about the biological role of a gene. A successful combination of classical ‘wet’ biochemistry, applied both in vitro and in vivo, plus a functional genomic approach may bring new and reliable insights into the roles of polysaccharide-modifying enzymes in plants, as will be discussed further in the section ‘Experimentally investigating wall enzyme action in vivo’. Assaying polysaccharide-restructuring enzyme activities Numerous enzymes are extractable from plant cell walls in aqueous buffers (sometimes assisted by high salt), including glycanases, glycosidases, esterases, proteinases, transglycanases, transglycosidases, transacylases, peroxidases, oxidases, and lyases. Often, their substrate specificities suggest physiological significance in modifying wall components (Minic, 2008). Here are discussed methods for assaying glycanases, glycosidases, transglycanases, and transglycosidases. Glycanases and glycosidases Glycanase and glycosidase activities are assayed on substrates in which a glycosidic bond is hydrolysed. Methods for glycanase-catalysed endo-hydrolysis of polysaccharides include (in approximate order of decreasing sensitivity): (i) Loss of a polysaccharide solution’s viscosity, measured in a simple viscometer (Farkaš and Maclachlan, 1988). Plant cell-wall enzymes | 3535 Polysaccharides are also cleaved non-enzymically by ascorbate-generated hydroxyl radicals (•OH) (Fry, 1998); therefore, in these highly sensitive assays, enzyme extracts should be freed of ascorbate etc., for example by dialysis. (ii) Increase in the number of reducing termini (oxo groups, assayed colorimetrically). It should be checked that the new ‘reducing termini’ formed are not monosaccharides released by glycosidases, nor mid-chain oxo groups introduced by •OH (Fry et al., 2001; Vreeburg and Fry, 2005). (iii) Release of radioactive oligosaccharides from a reducingend-labelled polysaccharide, e.g. [galactitol-3H]galactan (Fry, 1983) or [glucitol-3H]xyloglucan (Zhu et al., 2012). Since most glycosidases attack at the non-reducing end, this method is unlikely to be compromised by contaminating glycosidases. (iv) Increase in products insoluble in a precipitant (e.g. ethanol). For convenience, the substrate can be prelabelled with fluorescent or coloured tags (as in azo-xylan). (v) Release of water-soluble dyed products from artificially cross-linked polysaccharides (e.g. azurine-crosslinked polysaccharides). Glycanases and glycosidases can also be assayed on fully defined oligosaccharides (Fig. 2A–C) that model biologically relevant polysaccharides. Products generated are analysed by TLC or HPLC: monosaccharides are diagnostic of glycosidase activities; oligosaccharides smaller than the starting material but unaccompanied by monosaccharides indicate glycanases. Alternative assays for certain glycosidases employ fluorogenic or chromogenic model substrates (e.g. p-nitrophenyl or 4-methylumbelliferyl β-galactoside; NP- and 4-MU-β-Gal, respectively). However, such substrates are not always suitable: plant extracts that efficiently hydrolyse XGOs do not recognize NP-α-Xyl or NP-α-Fuc (Fanutti et al., 1991; Léonard et al., 2008). Transglycanases and transglycosidases In transglycosylation products may be reactions, the reactants and indistinguishable, for example (where , , and are chemically identical sugar residues as, for example, depicted for homo-transglycanases in Fig. 4), so some kind of labelling is often used. For transglycanases, the acceptor substrate can often (perhaps always) be an oligosaccharide, even if the donor must be a polysaccharide. A radiochemically or fluorescently tagged oligosaccharide is incubated with a nonlabelled polysaccharide and the diagnostic reaction product is recognized by its label and large size. Sensitive labels include tritium (3H), sulphorhodamine (SR), anthranilic acid (AA), and fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC). Some transglycanases discriminate between differently labelled acceptor substrates: for example, a Tropaeolum XTH has Km values for [3H]XLLG, XLLG–SR, XLLG–FITC, and XLLG–AA of 60, 81, 130, and 530 μM respectively, indicating a low affinity for XLLG–AA; in contrast, turnover numbers of the enzyme for the same substrates are respectively 20, 400, 1300, and 79 molecules of substrate per molecule of enzyme per hour (Kosík et al., 2011). Thus absolute reaction rates measured on fluorescent substrates may be misleading, albeit useful for screening purposes. The labelled high-Mr ‘hybrid’ product formed in such transglycanase assays is separated from remaining unreacted acceptor by a size-dependent method, for example paperbinding (if the acceptor, e.g. [3H]XXXGol, is easily washed off paper whereas the donor, e.g. xyloglucan or MLG, has an affinity for cellulose and remains bound), paper chromatography, gel-permeation chromatography, and ethanol precipitation. With paper chromatography, all polysaccharides will remain immobile in solvent mixtures such as ethyl acetate/acetic acid/water, while many oligosaccharides tested as acceptors migrate satisfactorily away from the origin; however, cello-, xylo-, manno- and MLG-oligosaccharides (MLGOs) remain partially or completely at the origin owing to their own affinity for cellulose, so paper chromatography is not recommended for these. Transglycosidases transfer only a single sugar residue, so a labelled acceptor substrate would not increase greatly in size. A convenient alternative is dual-labelling: a donor substrate radiolabelled in an appropriate sugar residue ( ) reacts with an acceptor substrate that is physically separable, for example by virtue of a cationic ‘label’ (⊕). The product of interest carries both labels: As with hydrolases, transglycosylases can be assayed on a nonlabelled oligosaccharide (as both donor and acceptor), e.g. by TLC analysis. The products proving transglycosylation are those larger than the substrate; smaller products are less informative because they could be either hydrolysis products or leaving groups formed by transglycosylation. Fluorescently and radiolabelled products can be also assayed by capillary electrophoresis and high-voltage paper electrophoresis respectively. Other techniques such as HPLC, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, or matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization–time-of-flight (MALDI–TOF) mass-spectrometry are an alternative to a quick semi-quantitative TLC, but not applicable when radiolabelled substrates are used. Specific examples of polysacchariderestructuring activities Hydrolases Plant cell walls contain more than 12 glycosidase activities (e.g. β-glucosidase, β-galactosidase, β-xylosidase, α-xylosidase) and more than nine glycanases (e.g. β-mannanase, β-xylanase) (reviewed by Labavitch, 1981; 3536 | Franková and Fry Fischer and Bennet, 1991; Hrmova and Fincher, 2001; Fry, 2004; Libertini et al., 2004; Baumann et al., 2007; Gilbert et al., 2008; Minic, 2008; Schröder et al., 2009). We recently surveyed 57 species for such activities using simple oligosaccharides that model cell-wall polysaccharides (Franková and Fry, 2011). The extensive results (exemplified in Table 3) are available in GHATAbase (Table 1). Tables 4 and 5 give fuller lists of plant glycanases and glycosidases, respectively, potentially attacking wall polysaccharides (Labavitch, 1981; Fry, 1995, 2004; de la Torre et al., 2002; Minic, 2008). Known activities are, together, theoretically capable of hydrolysing most of the major glycosidic bonds in wall polysaccharides (except RG-II). This, however, is not to imply that all, or any, of them are present in vivo at sufficiently high activity to completely lyse the wall. Nevertheless, the numerous hydrolase activities certainly contribute to the diverse examples of wall restructuring occurring during normal plant growth and development, as already discussed. Transglycanases Trans-β-xylanase The GHATAbase study, using fully defined oligosaccharide substrates, revealed not only hydrolases but also transglycanase and transglycosidase activities, several of which were new (Franková and Fry, 2011). For example, trans-β-xylanase activity converts Xyl6 to Xyl9 plus Xyl3: (Johnston et al., 2013). Here the donor was high-Mr xylan, the acceptor was [3H]Xyl5-ol, and the large radioactive ‘hybrid product’ was recognized by its immobility on paper chromatography (albeit slightly contaminated by unreacted [3H]Xyl5-ol). The authors attributed the trans-β-xylanase activity to a protein previously characterized as β-xylanase; thus the same protein can catalyse both endo-hydrolysis and endo-transglycosylation, the ratio between these depending on the acceptor-substrate concentration. Xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolase (XTH) Some transglycanases are undetectable on simple, well-defined oligosaccharides because the donor needs to be a polysaccharide. The first in-vitro demonstrations of XET activity were in plant enzyme extracts incubated with xyloglucan (donor) plus a labelled XGO (acceptor), for example [3H]XXFG (Fry et al., 1992) or XGO–PA (pyridylamino; Nishitani and Tominaga, 1992). The reaction generated a large polysaccharide–XGO conjugate. The enzymes had high affinity for XXFG (Km 50 μM) and higher affinity for XXXG (Km 33 μM) and XLLG (Km 19 μM). Polysaccharides other than xyloglucan had little, if any, donor ability (Fry et al., 1992). Nishitani and Tominaga (1992) showed that the enzyme required the donor to be a polysaccharide of Mr >10 000 for appreciable activity. Certain XTHs can, however, utilize oligosaccharides as both donor and acceptor: for example: XXX ′ XXX + XXXXXX ↔ XXXXXXXXX + XXX ( ′ indicates the cleaved bond ); whereas trans-β-xylosidase activity transfers one residue at a time: X ′XXXXX + XXXXXX ↔ XXXXXXX + XXXXX In a crude extract, these two activities are distinguishable by their largest products: trans-β-xylanase immediately starts making Xyl9, whereas trans-β-xylosidase initially produces Xyl7 and would not begin to make Xyl9, if any, until after a lag period during which Xyl7 and Xyl8 were sequentially generated. An alternative assay, modelled on one widely used for XET, also revealed trans-β-xylanase activity in plant extracts where is a fluorescent label (Saura-Valls et al., 2006), albeit with low affinity (Km 0.4 mM for donor and 1.9 mM for acceptor). Besides assays on extracted plant proteins, a genomic approach can be adopted. Plants have numerous ‘cell-wall genes’ (Mao et al., 2009): Arabidopsis has 730 open reading frames encoding putative glycosyltransferases and -hydrolases (Henrissat et al., 2001), 33 of which are XTHs. Work is in progress to test experimentally the predicted activities of encoded XTH-like proteins produced heterologously, e.g. in the yeast Pichia, and the following Arabidopsis XTHs do exhibit XET activity in vitro: XTH22 (formerly TCH4; Purugganan et al., 1997), 14, and 26 (Maris et al., 2009); and Table 3. Some hydrolase and transglycosylase activities detected in a survey of land plants, assayed on well-defined model substrates Substrate cleaved Bond broken Glycosidase (exo) Glycanase (endo) Transglycosidase (exo)Transglycanase (endo) Mannohexaose β-Man β-Mannosidase (+) α-Ara α-Arabinosidase (+) β-Mannanase (±) ? – Arabinohexaose Xylohexaose β-Xyl β-Xylosidase (+) α-Xyl α-Xylosidase (+) β-Xylanase (+) NA Trans-β-xylosidase (+) XXXG α-Fuc XLXG and 1st Gal of XLXG β-Gal α-Fucosidase (+) NA β-Galactosidase (+) NA XXLG β-Galactosidase (±) NA XXFG β-Gal – Trans-α-arabinosidase (±) Trans-α-arabinanase (±) Trans-α-xylosidase (+) – Trans-β-xylanase (+) NA NA Trans-β-galactosidase (+) NA Trans-β-galactosidase (+) NA +, activity detected in most or all land plants; ±, activity detected in few land plants; –, activity not detected in land plants;?, data uncertain; NA, not applicable. Data from Franková and Fry (2011). Plant cell-wall enzymes | 3537 Table 4. Range of cell-wall-related glycanase activities reported in plant extracts Cleaved bond (bold, underlined) Polysaccharide whose backbone Name for the enzyme activity could potentially be hydrolysed ...(1→4)-α-GalA-(1→4)-α-GalA-(1→4)... Pectic homogalacturonan ...(1→4)-β-Gal-(1→4)-β-Gal-(1→4)... ...(1→4)-β-Glc-(1→4)-β-Glc-(1→4)... Pectinase, galacturonanase, endo-polygalacturonase Galactanase Galactan/arabinogalactan domains of RG-I Cellulose, MLG; sometimes xyloglucan Cellulase, β-1,4-glucanase Reference Taylor et al. (1993); Ghiani et al. (2011) Lazan et al. (2004) Truelsen and Wyndaele (1991); Ohmiya et al. (1995) ...(1→4)-β-Glc-(1→4)-β-Glc-(1→3)... ...(1→3)-β-Glc-(1→4)-β-Glc-(1→4)... MLG ...(1→4)-β-Glc-(1→4)-β-Glc-(1→4)... with α-Xyl on O-6 of 2nd Glc Xyloglucan ...(1→3)-β-Glc-(1→3)-β-Glc-(1→3)... (with β-Glc on O-6 in laminarin) Callose, laminarin ...(1→4)-β-Man-(1→4)-β-Man-(1→4)... Mannan ‘Lichenase’ (MLG-specific β-1,4-glucanase) Xyloglucan endo-hydrolase (XEH), xyloglucan endo-glucanase (XEG) Hrmova and Fincher (1993); Martin and Somers (2004) Mannanase Dahal et al. (1997); Schröder et al. (2006) Ronen et al. (1991); Johnston et al. (2013) Cota et al. (2007); Mizuno et al. (2008) Xylan Xylanase ...(1→4)-β-GlcNAc-(1→4)-βGlcNAc-(1→4)... Chitin (of pathogenic organism) Chitinase (defence-induced) XTH12, 13, 17, 18, and 19 (Maris et al., 2011). In addition, XET activity has been confirmed for: ZmXTH1 of maize (Genovesi et al., 2008); PttXET16A of poplar (Johansson et al., 2004); HvXET5 of barley (Hrmova et al., 2007); and BRU1 of soyabean (Oh et al., 1998). All putative XTH translation-products tested to date have exhibited XET activity with tamarind xyloglucan as donor. Relatively subtle differences in substrate preference exist, e.g. between fucosylated and non-fucosylated xyloglucans (Purugganan et al., 1997) and between contrasting acceptor XGOs (Maris et al., 2009). More pronounced variation in pH preference was found: AtXTH12 and AtXTH17 have pH optima of 5.0 and 7.5 respectively (Maris et al., 2011), possibly indicating physiological differences in role. However, the main differences between XTHs appear to be in the genes’ promoters, such that XET activity can be induced in different tissues and in response to different environmental stimuli (Nishitani, 2005; Becnel et al., 2006). Among the group IIIa XTHs, examples from Tropaeolum (Fanutti et al., 1996; Baumann et al., 2007), Vigna (Tabuchi et al., 2001) and Arabidopsis (AtXTH31; Zhu et al., 2012; Kaewthai et al., 2013) are the only gene products for which endo-hydrolytic activity has so far been demonstrated in addition to low or very low XET activity. Two Tropaeolum XTHs, TmNXG1 and TmNXG2, produced in the seed after germination, catalyse both hydrolysis (XEH activity) and transglycosylation (XET activity, especially at higher substrate concentrations) of xyloglucan (Fanutti et al., 1996). Hydrolysis may fulfil the need to mobilize seed-reserve xyloglucans for the nutrition of the young seedling. Structural features indicate that these two enzymes acquired XEH by loss-of-function mutations Tabuchi et al. (2001); Zhu et al. (2012) Laminarinase, β-1,3-glucanase ...(1→4)-β-Xyl-(1→4)-β-Xyl-(1→4)... ...(1→4)-β-GlcN-(1→4)-β-GlcN-(1→4)... Chitosan Hrmova and Fincher (2001) Chitosanase (constitutively present) Ouakfaoui and Asselin (1992); Hung et al. (2002) of an XET-active ancestor (Baumann et al., 2007). By comparison with these features, two of the 33 Arabidopsis XTH genes (XTH31 and XTH32) were predicted to encode XEH-active enzymes. Recently, this prediction has been verified for XTH31 (AtXTH31; Zhu et al., 2012; Kaewthai et al., 2013). When produced in Pichia cells, XTH31 exhibited very slight XET activity, but >5000-fold greater XEH activity (Zhu et al., 2012). Trans-β-mannanase In tomato fruit, trans-β-mannanase activity was detected with high-Mr mannan as donor and [3H]manno-oligosaccharides as acceptor (Schröder et al., 2006). The activity was attributed to a previously characterized β-mannanase protein which even at low acceptor substrate concentrations (0.18 mM) also effected transglycosylation. Since this enzyme’s β-mannanase activity can be assayed on Man6, it would be expected that its trans-β-mannanase activity would also be detectable with Man6 as donor (and acceptor) substrate. However, the GHATAbase survey revealed no trans-β-mannanase activity on 1.6 mM Man6 in any of the 57 extracts studied. Although the list of 57 did not include tomato, this observation may indicate that trans-β-mannanase activity is not widespread in the plant kingdom even though β-mannosidase is (Franková and Fry, 2011) and β-mannanase was found to be evolutionarily ancient and involved in diverse biological processes (Yuan et al., 2007). MLG:xyloglucan endotransglucosylase (MXE) Several studies have explored the possibility that non-xyloglucan polysaccharides might serve as donors in conjunction with XGOs as acceptors—‘hetero’-transglycanase activities. Hrmova et al. (2007) tested the substrate specificity of a purified 3538 | Franková and Fry Table 5. Range of cell-wall-related glycosidase activities reported in plant extracts Non-reducing terminal residue cleaved Polysaccharide possessing Polysaccharide possessing Names for the such termini (backbone) such termini (side chains) enzyme activity Reference α-Araf-(1→5... Pectic arabinan/arabinogalactan Pectic arabinan and α-Arabinosidase arabinogalactan, arabinoxylans, and glucuronoarabinoxylans Lee et al. (2003); Rosli et al. (2009) α-Fuc-(1→2... – α-Fuc-(1→3... – Léonard et al. (2008); Franková and Fry (2011); Günl et al. (2011) de la Torre et al. (2002); Zeleny et al. (2006) α-Araf-(1→3... F of XXFG at non-reducing terminus of xyloglucan Wall glycoproteins and glycolipids? α-1,2-Fucosidase α-1,3–1,4-Fucosidase α-Fuc-(1→4... α-Gal-(1→6... – Galactomannans/ galactoglucomannans α-Galactosidase Appukuttan and Basu (1987) β-Gal-(1→4... Galactan/arabinogalactan domains of RG-I Pectic β-galactan and arabinogalactan domains of RG-I, some xylans β-Galactosidase De-Veau et al. (1993); Kaneko and Kobayashi (2003) Xyloglucan β-Galactosidase (widespread activity) de Alcântara et al. (1999); Sampedro et al. (2012) Xyloglucan β-Galactosidase (rare activity) Buckeridge et al. (1997); Franková and Fry (2011) Pressey and Reger (1989); García-Romera and Fry (1994); Tanaka et al. (2002) Crombie et al. (1998); Hrmova et al. (1996); Opassiri et al. (2003) β-Gal-(1→3... β-Gal-(1→2... in XLXG and 1st – L of XLLG β-Gal-(1→2... in XXLG α-GalA-(1→4... Pectic homogalacturonan of DP ≥ 5 β-Glc-(1→4... Cellulose, MLG, xyloglucan, callose, laminarin Laminarin β-Glucosidase, ‘exo-β-glucanase’ Mannans – β-Mannosidase Xylans Single Xyl at non-reducing termi-α-Xylosidase nus of xyloglucan Xylans (xylogalacturonans?) β-Xylosidase α-Galacturonidase, ‘exo-polygalacturonase’ β-Glc-(1→3... β-Glc-(1→6... β-Man(1→4... α-Xyl-(1→6... β-Xyl-(1→4... Hrmova et al. (2006); Franková and Fry (2011) Fanutti et al. (1991); Günl and Pauly (2011) Martínez et al. (2004); Minic et al. (2004); Franková and Fry (2011) β-Xyl-(1→3?.. barley XTH (HvXET5). With XGO–SR as acceptor, the preferred donor was xyloglucan, but certain other water-soluble, substituted (1→4)-β-d-glucans were also effective donors: reaction rates relative to that with xyloglucan as donor (rate ‘100’) were hydroxyethylcellulose, 44; sulphocellulose, 5; and carboxy methylcellulose, 0.4. Probably the hydroxyethyl ether and sulphate ester groups (both mainly linked to O-6 of β-Glc residues) sufficiently resembled the 6-O-linked α-Xyl residues of xyloglucan to fit in the enzyme’s donor site. Water-soluble β-glucans with different backbone linkages were much less effective: e.g. barley MLG, relative rate 0.2; Cetraria MLG (‘lichenan’), 0; (1→3)-β-glucan, 0; and glucomannan, 0. Furthermore, this purified XTH was 1000-times more effective with XGO–SR as acceptor substrate than with cello-oligosaccharide–SRs; it thus has a very high but not absolute specificity for xyloglucan and certain artificial (1→4)-β-glucans with hydrophilic side chains, whereas its ‘MXE’ reaction rate (with MLG as donor substrate) is 0–0.2% of its XET rate. Hrmova et al. (2007) suggested that other, untested XTHs might exhibit higher MXE activity. A good test of this suggestion is to assay crude plant extracts, which will contain multiple isoenzymes. In fact, Ait Mohand and Farkaš (2006) had conducted such assays in Tropaeolum extracts. In agreement with the HvXET5 data, they showed that the XET donor preferences were xyloglucan > HEC > CMC. They also detected heterotransglycanase activities (donor, xyloglucan; acceptor cello- or laminari-oligosaccharide–SRs, these acceptors lacking side chains) and suggested that the results indicate the plant’s ability to covalently link polysaccharides to qualitatively different ones, forming, for example, xyloglucan–cellulose bonds. Following up the work on HvXET5, Fry et al. (2008a) surveyed extracts from diverse land-plants and algae for MXE activity. Curiously, one evolutionarily isolated genus, Equisetum, gave extracts with very high MXE activity, often exceeding its XET activity. Equisetum extracts acting on MLG as donor showed several significant differences from when acting on xyloglucan as donor, indicating that the MXE-active protein is different from the major XET-active XTHs. For example, (i) when XGOs were used as acceptor substrates, different Equisetum extracts showed a consistent pattern of preferences among side chain-substituted (1→4)-β-glucans (xyloglucan > water-soluble cellulose acetate > HEC > CMC), whereas the rate with MLG as Plant cell-wall enzymes | 3539 donor varied independently; (ii) MXE and XET activities peaked in old and young Equisetum stems respectively; (iii) MXE had a higher affinity for XXXGol (Km ~4 μM) than any known XTH; and (iv) MXE and XET activities differed in their oligosaccharide acceptor-substrate preferences, for example XET activity 3-fold preferred XLLGol over XXXGol, whereas MXE activity slightly preferred XXXGol (Fry et al., 2008a). Other possible homo- and hetero-transglycanases The GHATAbase survey also indicated the presence in certain plant extracts (broad bean, pea, and cauliflower) of trans-α-arabinanase activity, converting (1→5)-α-arabinooctaose (Ara8) to both smaller and larger products such as Ara11–14 (Franková and Fry, 2011). The reaction may be of the type AAAA′ AAAA + AAAAAAAA ↔ AAAAAAAAAAAA + AAAA where A = arabinose bond; ʹ = bond broken. Other surveys of plant extracts returned negative data, e.g. where the donor was xyloglucan and the prospective acceptors were galacto- or arabino-oligosaccharides that represent RG-I side chains (Popper and Fry, 2008). Thus, no evidence could be found for a hetero-transglycanase that might generate the xyloglucan–rhamnogalacturonan bonds detected in muro (Thompson and Fry, 2000; Popper and Fry, 2005). Negative data were also obtained with homogalacturonans as donor and/or acceptor (García-Romera and Fry, 1994); this can now be explained by the fact that all plant galacturonases are inverting hydrolases (CAZy family GH28) and would thus not readily evolve transglycanase capability. An interesting high-throughput strategy for discovering transglycanases has been developed (Kosík et al., 2010). Fourteen different polysaccharides (potential donors) were printed onto a nitrocellulose surface, forming a ‘glycochip’, which was then bathed in an Arabidopsis or Tropaeolum enzyme extract containing 5 μM of an oligosaccharide–SR (potential acceptor). After incubation, the chip was washed in ethanol, which removed unreacted oligosaccharide, after which any fluorescence on the chip was considered to represent a transglycanase product. With the Tropaeolum extract, numerous donor:acceptor pairs led to apparent activity, including some novel pairs, such as galactomannan:XGO, glucuronoxylan:XGO, galactomannan:MLGO, and xyloglucan:MLGO. Other pairs were also listed, for example xyloglucan:cello-oligosaccharides, xyloglucan:laminari-oligosaccharides, and glucuronoxylan:galactomannan-oligosaccharides, but data in these cases are not shown. Conversely, some substrate pairs do seem to reveal slight activity, especially at pH 7, for example arabinoxylan:XGO, pectinate:XGO, arabinogalactan:XGO, and arabinan:XGO, but these examples were not mentioned. Curiously, in the arabinoxylan:XGO case, activity was only observed with arabinoxylan from wheat, not oat (supplementary figure S2 of Kosík et al., 2010), raising the possibility that a contaminating polysaccharide in the wheat preparation was responsible. Compared with Tropaeolum, Arabidopsis extracts gave far fewer ‘hits’; for example, galactomannan:XGO activity was undetectable. Boiled-enzyme controls verified the lack of physical binding of the fluorescent oligosaccharides to the ‘printed’ polysaccharides. However, the study lacked a control testing whether polysaccharides co-extracted with the enzymes (e.g. xyloglucan in the case of Tropaeolum seedlings) might hydrogen-bond to some of the immobilized polysaccharides on the chip and give false-positives—fluorescent spots that resemble novel hetero-transglycanase products but are actually attributable to XET activity. Stratilová et al. (2010) further showed that hetero-transglycanase activities of a purified pI-6.3 Tropaeolum XTH represent side reactions due to relaxed substrate specificity, the favoured activity being XET. Evidence for this conclusion was that low concentrations of added unlabelled XGOs were sufficient to competitively interfere in hetero-reactions. For example, the xyloglucan:MLGO–SR (MXE) reaction was 93% inhibited by 1.9 mM unlabelled XGOs but only 35% inhibited by a higher concentration (7.6 mM) of unlabelled MLGOs. Trans-α-xylosidase and other transglycosidase activities In principle, any retaining glycosidase can exhibit some transglycosidase activity at high substrate concentrations. For example, 0.5–2.0 M substrates revealed trans-α-galactosidase activity in a Prunus α-galactosidase (Dey, 1979), and 100 mM nitrophenyl β-glucoside revealed trans-β-glucosidase activity in a barley β-glucosidase (Hrmova et al., 1998). These are unphysiologically high concentrations. Transglycosidase activities detectable at lower concentrations start to become biologically significant. For example, a purified Tropaeolum seed enzyme exhibited trans-β-glucosidase activity in a TLC-based assay on a defined oligosaccharide, cellotetraose [(1→4)-β-Glc4]. This activity transiently competed with concurrent β-glucosidase (exo-hydrolytic) activity when acting on 5 mM cellotetraose, although hydrolysis strongly predominated at 2 mM, so it is uncertain whether the transglycosidase activity would operate appreciably at physiological substrate concentrations (Crombie et al., 1998). In rice, both bglu1 and bglu2 (encoding β-glucosidases) are highly expressed in young seedlings and mature nodes, bglu1 also in flowers (Opassiri et al., 2003). Purified bglu1 hydrolysed both pNP-β-Glc and certain small oligosaccharides, optimally (1→3)-β-Glc2 and (1→4)-β-Glc4, and showed moderate trans-β-glucosidase activity when these substrates were present at 5 mM. This supports the theory that bglu1 can potentially generate new longer oligosaccharides from shorter ones in vivo and this may play a role in recycling the sugars released from the cell wall after germination or during flower expansion (Opassiri et al., 2003). However, it is unclear what biological benefit might accrue from resizing small cello-oligosaccharides. Incubation of 1.4 mM XXXG with diverse plant extracts gave a series of products one, two, or three sugar residues larger than the heptasaccharide starting material, indicating transglycosidase activity (Fig. 5). The virtual absence of free xylose 3540 | Franková and Fry Fig. 5. TLC evidence for trans-α-xylosidase activity. The chromatogram shows products formed by the action of plant extracts on 1.4 mM XXXG (xyloglucan heptasaccharide; for further explanation of G, L, and X, see text). Pure substrate is shown in the left-hand lane. Blue indicates smaller products remaining after transglycosylation plus any hydrolysis products; pink indicates products formed by trans-α-xylosylation, during which xylose residue(s) are added to XXXG or to one of its major smaller products (pink arrows indicating these trans-xylosylation reactions). DP, degree of polymerization (for example, DP10 indicates a decasaccharide); IP, isoprimeverose. From Franková and Fry (2012a). Trans-[α]-xylosidase and trans-[β]-galactosidase activities, widespread in plants, modify and stabilise xyloglucan structures. The Plant Journal, with permission of John Wiley & Sons. among the reaction products indicates little α-xylosidase (exohydrolase) activity (Franková and Fry, 2012a). 3H-Labelled substrates showed detectable transglycosylation at concentrations as low as 16 μM (in addition to hydrolysis, which is favoured at such low substrate concentrations). Definitive evidence for the trans-α-xylosidase reaction occurring was provided by dual-labelling experiments. With an aminolabelled (cationic) XGO as acceptor and [xylosyl-3H]XXXG as donor, extracts of monocots (snowdrop, asparagus) and dicots (chicory, parsley, cauliflower) all generated double-labelled (positively charged, radioactive) products (Franková and Fry, 2012a): 2012a). It is likely that polysaccharide-to-polysaccharide transfer of single xylose residues can also occur. In the case of the XGO-toXGO reaction, the transferred α-xylose residue ends up attached to an existing xylose residue (not to a glucose residue), forming a novel xyloglucan trisaccharide unit, α-Xylp-(1→4)-α-Xylp-(1→6)-Glc, assigned the sequence code-letter ‘V’ (Franková and Fry, 2012b). It will be interesting to discover whether V also occurs in natural xyloglucan. A similar dual-labelling strategy using [Gal-3H]XXLG or [Gal-3H]XLLG and XGO–NH2 gave evidence for trans-βgalactosidase activity in plant extracts. In contrast, [Fuc-3H] With 37 μM [Xyl-3H]XXXG as donor plus 1 mM XGO–NH2 as acceptor, transglycosylation exceeded xylosyl hydrolysis 1.6- to 7.3fold (lowest in cauliflower, highest in snowdrop), implying the presence of enzymes that favour transglycosylation. The extracts also transferred α-xylose residues from [xylosyl-3H]XXXG to polysaccharide acceptor substrates (xyloglucan, water-soluble cellulose acetate, MLG, glucomannan, and arabinoxylan) (Franková and Fry, XXFG gave no positively charged, radioactive products, indicating the absence of a trans-α-fucosidase activity – as predicted for CAZy class GH95 (inverting), which includes plant α-1,2-fucosidases. Panning for novel homo- and hetero-transglycosidase activities is now feasible, given that simple but effective assays are available. Plant cell-wall enzymes | 3541 Phylogenetic variation Although the genomic approach is valuable for revealing predicted proteins that may contribute to cell-wall restructuring, the strong possibility exists that additional hydrolase and transglycosylase activities are being overlooked because their genes are unidentified or incorrectly annotated. The discovery of a unique endotransglucosylase activity (MXE) in Equisetum (Fry et al., 2008a) emphasises the need to demonstrate biochemically the reactions catalysed by predicted wall enzymes. Surveys of wall-acting enzyme activities thus usefully complement the ongoing description of the corresponding genes. Among land plants, appreciable MXE activity is almost confined to a single genus, Equisetum (the horsetails). Equisetum probably qualifies as the most evolutionarily isolated genus of all living land-plants, its closest extant relatives having diverged >370 000 000 years ago (in the Upper Devonian), at about the time when Tiktaalik, the almost-tetrapod fish, was groping its way into swamps. Real amphibians did not emerge until about 35 million years later, in the Carboniferous. Equisetum has thus been evolving independently from all other plants for >370 My, so it is not surprising that it has acquired (or retained) some biochemical peculiarities, including MXE. The confinement of MXE to one genus, Equisetum, relates to taxonomic specialization in cell-wall chemistry. Many of the major discontinuities in plant evolution involved significant alterations in wall polysaccharides (Popper, 2008; Fry, 2011; Sørensen et al., 2011), which will have required new biosynthetic genes but also driven the acquisition of novel enzymes involved in wall restructuring. For example, MLG (one of the substrates of MXE) is largely confined to the Poales, Equisetales, and lichens (Trethewey et al., 2005; Fry et al., 2008b).4 Chemical evidence for xyloglucan (e.g. its hydrolysis to yield isoprimeverose) is limited to embryophytes (not their sister group the charophytes; Popper and Fry, 2003) (although immunolabelling suggests that a chemically-related polysaccharide is present in certain Chara cells, Domozych et al., 2009); low-fucose xyloglucan is characteristic of the Poales and the Solanales (Carpita and Gibeaut, 1993; McDougall and Fry, 1994; Hoffman et al., 2005); β-GalA-rich xyloglucans are widespread only in mosses and liverworts (Peña et al., 2008), although they also occur in angiosperm root-hairs (Peña et al., 2012); α-Arap in xyloglucan is known only from Equisetum and Selaginella (Peña et al., 2008); and 3-O-methylrhamnose is a major wall component only in charophytes, bryophytes, and homosporous lycopodiophytes (Popper et al., 2004), 3-O-methylgalactose being added by the heterosporous lycopodiophytes (Popper et al., 2001). These observations lead to the prediction that wall-modifying enzymes should also vary between taxa. This prediction was supported by an extensive study of phylogenetic variation in wall polysaccharide-modifying enzymes. The results are collated in GHATAbase (Franková and Fry, 2011). First, great variation was noted in the occurrence of known enzyme activities between different plants, 4 in some cases correlating with taxonomic differences in polysaccharide composition. Secondly, the results revealed several new transglycanase and transglycosidase activities, whose existence would not have been predicted by genomic approaches (Mao et al., 2009) and whose biological roles now invite exploration. In addition, GHATAbase (Table 1) is a valuable resource for selecting plant tissues from which to extract and study enzymes of interest. Experimentally investigating wall enzyme action in vivo Genes predicted to encode wall-modifying enzymes may or may not exhibit the predicted activity in vitro, and this uncertainty can readily be explored by assays on the purified protein. But, another important question is whether the enzyme actually catalyses any reaction (‘acts’) in vivo. Four approaches to answering this puzzle, with different pros and cons, are discussed in the following sections. The mutation/RNAi approach The first approach is to mutate (or incapacitate via RNAi) the relevant gene and to observe whether any phenotypic change ensues – which may indicate a direct or indirect role of the targeted gene. T-DNA insertion lines and RNAi plants provide useful plant material deficient in the protein (although, in the case of multigene families, not necessarily the activity) of interest. For example, knocking out AtXyl1, thought to be the only Arabidopsis gene encoding α-xylosidase activity, resulted in (i) a reduced ability of the seedlings to control the anisotropic growth of several organs and (ii) xyloglucan with a reduced proportion of Fuc and Gal, possibly affecting its interaction with cellulose (Sampedro et al., 2010). This observation suggests that the AtXyl1 gene plays an important role in plant growth. However, since a lack of α-xylosidase activity induced a pleiotropic increase in other glycosidase activities (e.g. β-galactosidase and α-fucosidase), it seems that gene silencing does not reliably discriminate between direct and indirect roles of xyloglucan-active exohydrolases (Sampedro et al., 2010). Knocking out XTH31, a highly root-expressed gene that encodes an XEH-active protein, caused a ~38% inhibition of root elongation, suggesting that it acts in vivo and contributes to root growth (Zhu et al., 2012). Comparison of an xth31 knockout mutant with the wild-type (Col-0) showed that normal XTH31 expression has, surprisingly, several pleiotropic roles: (i) increasing total extractable XET activity and in situ observable XET action, but not total extractable XEH activity; (ii) promoting the elongation of roots by about 60%; (iii) increasing xyloglucan accumulation in the wall; and (iv) increasing the Al3+-binding capacity of root cell walls. Interestingly, the 60% element of growth attributable to XTH31 is strongly inhibited by 5 μM Al3+, whereas the XTH31-independent element of growth (that which continues unabated in the xth31 mutant) is The occurrence of MLG in Selaginella is uncertain: immunological evidence supported it in S. moellendorffii (Harholt et al., 2012), but chromatographic analysis suggested its absence in S. willdenowii (Xue and Fry, 2012).) 3542 | Franková and Fry only slightly affected by 50 μM Al3+. These observations could imply that XTH31, and/or some of its indirect effects, are specifically inhibited by Al3+. XTH31 protein is detectable mainly in internal tissues of the root’s elongation zone, whereas in-vivo XET action predominates in outer tissues (supplementary figures of Zhu et al., 2012). This indicates that most XET action in roots was not directly due to XTH31, in agreement with the observation that the heterologously produced protein has high XEH and only very slight XET activity. In view of this, it was surprising that xth31 mutant roots show diminished insitu XET action and low extractable XET activity. Knocking out XTH31 indirectly diminishes the action and activity of certain XET-active proteins such as XTH12 and XTH13 (Zhu et al., 2012). The findings emphasize that the mutation approach, although demonstrating phenotypic consequences of genes in vivo, does not guarantee that observed effects are direct effects on restructuring of the expected substrate. Clear evidence for a role of XET activity was also obtained by the mutation approach in additional studies. XTH15 and XTH17 are upregulated in Arabidopsis petioles in response to dim light, an environmental stress that triggers rapid cell elongation. Mutation of either of these genes abolished this shade-avoidance response, suggesting a causal role, attributing a biological function to two XET-active proteins (Sasidharan et al., 2010). XTH18 is highly expressed in Arabidopsis roots, and RNAi plants compromised in its expression exhibited a 16–18% inhibition of root elongation rate and epidermal cell length (Osato et al., 2006). This supports the idea that XTH18 contributes to root growth, suggesting important XET action in vivo. An interesting study of AtBXL1 reveals some further potential ambiguities in the genetic approach. This gene encodes a β-xylosidase that is produced in vascular tissues, and bxl1 antisense plants with decreased β-xylosidase activity were found to have defective development (e.g. short siliquae and curled leaf edges; Goujon et al., 2003). These observations might suggest that BXL1 exhibits β-xylosidase action in vivo, contributing to normal plant growth. Antisense technology, however, is not guaranteed to target only a single gene, and it remains possible that AtBXL2, which is 70% identical to AtBXL1, was co-suppressed. This suspicion was reinforced by the finding that bxl1-1, an insertional mutant, was developmentally normal in its growth; bxl1-1 was, however, defective in the swelling and release of seed-coat mucilage and therefore in germination (Arsovski et al., 2009). Analysis of the mutant’s mucilage showed 4.5-fold elevated proportions of 5-linked Araf residues in seed-coat RG-I and this, coupled with the discovery that AtBXL1 is a bifunctional β-d-xylopyranosidase/α-l-arabinofuranosidase (Minic et al., 2004) led to the suggestion that its true action, at least in the seed-coat, is α-arabinosidase. The bxl1-1 mutant seed-coat mucilage showed no change in Xyl residues (Arsovski et al., 2009). It remains to be seen whether the enzyme’s β-xylosidase activity is manifested in β-xylosidase action in any other tissues in vivo. It is interesting that AtBXL1 appears to have a role (seed-coat mucilage de-arabinosylation) not copied by any of the other three (UniProtKB) putative α-arabinosidases of Arabidopsis thaliana. Tracing the fate of exogenous labelled model substrates A second, more direct, approach investigates enzyme action by in-vivo observations on the behaviour of exogenous labelled oligomeric substrates which mimic wall polysaccharides but which (unlike exogenous polysaccharides) can freely diffuse into contact with enzymes that are buried deep in the wall matrix. Labelled XGOs, when fed to living plant tissues, act as acceptor substrates for XET action. The diagnostic product is a labelled polysaccharide, easily distinguished from the oligosaccharide by its solubility properties. This product will be formed only if an endogenous XET-active protein molecule can physically access an endogenous xyloglucan molecule (chemically suitable as a donor substrate); the exogenous labelled XGO is small enough to diffuse throughout the apoplast and come into contact with the polysaccharide–enzyme complex. If the participating endogenous polysaccharide was hydrogen-bonded near its non-reducing end to a microfibril, then the labelled polysaccharide product will remain integrated within the cell wall when washed in aqueous solutions. On the other hand, if the donor polysaccharide was unattached to cellulose, or hydrogen-bonded only near its reducing end, then the product will be water-soluble – but will nevertheless remain in place if the specimen is washed in 70% ethanol rather than water. Several fluorescent and radioactive XGOs have been used in this way to demonstrate XET action in vivo in various cell and tissue systems. For example, 3H-labelled XGOs were shown to become covalently linked to endogenous xyloglucan in cell cultures (Baydoun and Fry, 1989; Smith and Fry, 1991). Fluorescent XGOs were applied similarly – with the advantage of ease of localization but with less convenient quantification – in celery petioles (Fry, 1997), Arabidopsis root elongation zones (Vissenberg et al., 2000), root hair initiation sites (Vissenberg et al., 2001), specifically at the microfibril–matrix interface (Vissenberg et al., 2005), in BY2 cultured tobacco cells (Ito and Nishitani, 1999), in the developing G-layers of xylem (Nishikubo et al., 2007), in opening carnation petals (Harada et al., 2011), and in cells of the alga Chara (Van Sandt et al., 2007). This approach is also useful to demonstrate the absence of a postulated enzyme action in vivo. For instance, the suggestion that an XTH which exhibits slight MXE (hetero-transglycanase activity in vitro may endow barley tissues with MXE action in vivo (Hrmova et al., 2007) was rejected on the basis of experiments in which [3H]XGOs were fed to living barley tissues. Action of endogenous XTH on endogenous barley hemicelluloses generated [3H]xyloglucan (a high-Mr product releasing [3H]XGOs when treated with xyloglucanase), confirming XET action, but did not form any [3H]MLG (which would have released [3H]XGOs when treated with lichenase), demonstrating the absence of appreciable MXE action in vivo (Mohler et al., 2013). Identical experiments did demonstrate substantial MXE action in Equisetum tissue. This general approach is potentially capable of detecting the in-vivo action of any of the other transglycanases whose activities have been detected in vitro, for example trans-βxylanase (Franková and Fry, 2011; Johnston et al., 2013) and trans-β-mannanase (Schröder et al., 2006). Plant cell-wall enzymes | 3543 Feeding labelled oligosaccharides to living tissues gives strong evidence that transglycanases act in vivo, but one ambiguity remains: although action of endogenous enzyme on endogenous donor polysaccharide is demonstrated, it remains possible that no endogenous acceptor substrate was accessible in vivo, in which case the transglycosylation reaction (begun by the formation of a polysaccharide– enzyme complex) would not be consummated by transfer of the polysaccharide to another wall component in vivo. The only relevant part of the acceptor substrate is its nonreducing terminus, which for XET action should preferably be an α-Xyl-(1→6)-Glc (isoprimeverose) unit, and it is possible that this terminus either is masked (inaccessible) within the wall matrix (Marcus et al., 2010) or has been docked by α-xylosidase action (Sampedro et al., 2010; Franková and Fry, 2011; Günl and Pauly, 2011) or ‘end-capped’ by transα-xylosidase action (Franková and Fry, 2012a, b). Seemingly minor modifications such as these, changing just the single residue at the non-reducing extremity of a large polysaccharide chain, potentially take a whole xyloglucan molecule out of play as far as its acceptor substrate role is concerned. Nevertheless, this potential ambiguity in the interpretation of experiments involving exogenous labelled XGOs does not detract from their usefulness in providing evidence against postulated enzyme actions, e.g. of MXE in barley (Mohler et al., 2012) and of pectic transglycanase in cultured Rosa and Acer cells (García-Romera and Fry, 1994). Tracking the molecular ‘careers’ of endogenous polysaccharides A third approach by which to investigate whether wall enzymes act in vivo is to track the molecular ‘careers’ of their putative substrates (endogenous polysaccharides) and determine whether these undergo chemical changes of the predicted type. Such tracking is feasible after in-vivo feeding of an exogenous, isotopically labelled, metabolic precursor that labels a cohort of contemporaneously synthesized polysaccharide molecules, whose degradation/modification can then be monitored in vivo at intervals thereafter. Under these conditions, all three players in a transglycanase reaction (enzyme, donor substrate, and acceptor) are endogenous. The method is particularly powerful if dual labelling is applied. For example, plant cells are pregrown in substrate concentrations of a non-radioactive, density-labelled, metabolically central precursor (e.g. glucose labelled with 2H and/or 13C), so that all wall components become uniformly ‘heavy’. At time t, the tissue is transferred into medium containing ordinary glucose so that all future polysaccharides synthesized are ‘light’. Soon after t, a tracer concentration of radiolabelled precursor (e.g. [1-3H]Ara) is added. When the resulting ‘hot, light’ polysaccharides reach the apoplast, they may undergo interpolymeric transglycosylation with the ‘cold, heavy’ molecules already there, yielding ‘hot, halfheavy’ products. Density of the 3H-polysaccharides is determined by isopycnic centrifugation in caesium trifluoroacetate. By such experiments, and by altering the timing of the various medium shifts, clear evidence for XET action in vivo was obtained (Thompson et al., 1997; Thompson and Fry, 2001). The results supported XET action of two types: (i) ‘integrational transglycosylation’, in which part of a newly secreted xyloglucan chain is grafted to a previously wall-bound one, contributing to wall assembly; and (ii) ‘restructuring transglycosylation’, in which two xyloglucan molecules, both already wall-bound, participate in the reaction, resulting in a remodelling of existing wall architecture, with probable wall loosening necessary for cell expansion. Use of xenobiotics to inactivate a family of related wall proteins For a fourth approach, wall enzymes can be inactivated by exogenous inhibitory chemicals (xenobiotics), and the biological consequences observed. In principle, this approach can provide data comparable to those obtained from mutant or RNAi lines, but with the advantage that a whole class of related wall enzyme proteins may be targeted simultaneously. Since Arabidopsis has 33 XTH genes, attempts to produce a plant totally lacking XET activity would require a line with mutations in all 33 genes. Such a line would be tedious to generate and would possibly be embryo lethal, precluding any insight into XET’s roles in postembryonic growth and development. However, a xenobiotic targeting the active site common to all XTHs could be applied at any desired stage of development, and the consequences of a sudden block in XET action observed. For this reason the Edinburgh Cell Wall Group is screening xenobiotic collections on a high-throughput basis to search for inhibitors of XET and other wall enzymes. The discovery of suitable xenobiotics will not only provide a valuable tool for exploring the in-vivo roles of wall enzymes, but, with wall targets being highly specific to the plant kingdom, and in some cases to a narrow range of plant taxa, they may also present novel opportunities for new selective herbicide development. Concluding remarks In conclusion, by focusing on plant cell-wall-localized glycosylhydrolases and the ability of some of these enzymes to catalyse transglycosylation reactions, this review draws attention to interesting and largely overlooked activities likely to serve important roles in the post-synthetic modification of plant cellwall polysaccharides in vivo. By considering the mechanism of transglycosylation (versus hydrolysis), we highlight the fact that the enzymic activities of some well-documented gene-products may frequently be misinterpreted. An open mind is necessary when studying transcript profiles and online databases to avoid jumping to ill-founded conclusions about what reaction(s) a wall enzyme may actually catalyse in vivo. To promote an evidence-based approach to elucidating their roles, this review has summarized some of the methods currently available for tracing the behaviour of the enzymes’ substrates – mainly pectic and hemicellulosic polysaccharides – in the walls of living plant cells. It is predicted that application of such techniques will open new insights into the mechanism and regulation of cell expansion and other wall-centred aspects of plant physiology. 3544 | Franková and Fry Acknowledgements The authors thank the Leverhulme Foundation for supporting their work in this field. References Ait Mohand F, Farkaš V. 2006. Screening for heterotransglycosylating activities in extracts from nasturtium (Tropaeolum majus). Carbohydrate Research 341, 577–581. 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