Xyloglucan xylosyltransferase stem region mediates heterodimer formation.
Julian JD, Zhang N, Winders RJ, Stewart CE, Culbertson AT
Cell Wall Biology
When a bean seedling forces its way through compacted garden soil or a sapling whips in a storm without snapping, xyloglucan in the cell wall is absorbing that stress — knowing exactly how it is assembled opens a path to growing plants with tougher, more resilient stems.
Plant cell walls are built from interlocking sugar chains, and one of the most important — xyloglucan — gives stems and young shoots their bendable strength. Two tiny molecular machines have to team up to build this chain, and scientists just captured detailed images of them locked together for the first time, showing exactly how they fit. The key surprise was a small 'docking arm' on one machine that grabs the other to form the working pair — a trick that many other plant-building proteins probably use too.
Key Findings
Crystal structures of the XXT2-XXT5 enzyme pair confirm they form an obligatory heterodimer — they must work as a locked pair, not independently, to fully build the xyloglucan chain.
XXT5 contains a secondary binding pocket that likely cradles a partly-built xyloglucan chain, suggesting the two enzymes hand off and extend the chain in a coordinated sequence.
A short 'stem' segment of XXT2 physically contacts XXT5 to drive pairing; this interaction is absent in a related homodimer (XXT1), identifying stem regions as a general switch controlling how glycosyltransferase enzymes oligomerize.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists solved the 3D structure of two enzymes that team up to build xyloglucan, a flexible sugar-chain polymer woven into plant cell walls. The discovery reveals how one enzyme's 'stem arm' physically docks with its partner—an interaction that controls how these molecular machines pair up and work together.
Abstract Preview
Xyloglucans are plant cell wall hemicelluloses composed of a glucan backbone substituted with xylosyl residues with diverse branching patterns. Xyloglucan xylosyltransferases (XXT) 2 and XXT5 are b...
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