Glycosyl transferases in family 61 mediate arabinofuranosyl transfer onto xylan in grasses
Xylan, a hemicellulosic component of the plant cell wall, is one of the most abundant polysaccharides in nature. In contrast to dicots, xylan in grasses is extensively modified by α-(1,2)– and α-(1,3)–linked arabinofuranose. Despite the importance of grass arabinoxylan in human and animal nutrition and for bioenergy, the enzymes adding the arabinosyl substitutions are unknown. Here we demonstrate that knocking-down glycosyltransferase (GT) 61 expression in wheat endosperm strongly decreases α-(1,3)–linked arabinosyl substitution of xylan. Moreover, heterologous expression of wheat and rice GT61s in Arabidopsis leads to arabinosylation of the xylan, and therefore provides gain-of-function evidence for α-(1,3)-arabinosyltransferase activity. Thus, GT61 proteins play a key role in arabinoxylan biosynthesis and therefore in the evolutionary divergence of grass cell walls.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Bronze |
| Keywords | RRES175, 175_Biochemistry, 175_Climatology, 175_Plant sciences, 175_Genetics |
| Project | Centre for Crop Genetic Improvement (CGI), Centre for Mathematical and Computational Biology (MCB), Manipulation of cell wall synthesis to improve the dietary fibre composition of wheat flour, Project: 4675 |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 09:45 |
| Last Modified | 19 Dec 2025 14:33 |


