Cell wall composition determines handedness reversal in helicoidal cellulose architectures of <i>Pollia condensata</i> fruits

Yin Chang, Rox Middleton, Yu Ogawa, Tom Gregory, Lisa M. Steiner, Alexander Kovalev, Rebecca H. N. Karanja, Paula J. Rudall, Beverley J. Glover, Stanislav N. Gorb, Silvia Vignolini

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14 Citations (SciVal)

Abstract

Chiral asymmetry is important in a wide variety of disciplines and occurs across length scales. While several natural chiral biomolecules exist only with single handedness, they can produce complex hierarchical structures with opposite chiralities. Understanding how the handedness is transferred from molecular to the macroscopic scales is far from trivial. An intriguing example is the transfer of the handedness of helicoidal organizations of cellulose microfibrils in plant cell walls. These cellulose helicoids produce structural colors if their dimension is comparable to the wavelength of visible light. All previously reported examples of a helicoidal structure in plants are left-handed except, remarkably, in the Pollia condensata fruit; both left- and right-handed helicoidal cell walls are found in neighboring cells of the same tissue. By simultaneously studying optical and mechanical responses of cells with different handednesses, we propose that the chirality of helicoids results from differences in cell wall composition. In detail, here we showed statistical substantiation of three different observations: 1) light reflected from right-handed cells is red shifted compared to light reflected from left-handed cells, 2) right-handed cells occur more rarely than left-handed ones, and 3) right-handed cells are located mainly in regions corresponding to interlocular divisions. Finally, 4) right-handed cells have an average lower elastic modulus compared to left-handed cells of the same color. Our findings, combined with mechanical simulation, suggest that the different chiralities of helicoids in the cell wall may result from different chemical composition, which strengthens previous hypotheses that hemicellulose might mediate the rotations of cellulose microfibrils.
Original languageEnglish
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume118
Issue number51
Early online date15 Dec 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21 Dec 2021

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) NanoDTC EP/G037221/1 and EP/R513179/1 (R.M.), Cambridge Trust, Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) David Phillips Fellowship BB/K014617/1, European Research Council (ERC) SeSaME ERC-2014-STG H2020 639088 (S.V.), and the Cambridge-Africa ALBORADA Research Fund (R.M., R.H.N.K., and S.V.). We would also like to thank Wilberforce Okeka for his help in locating fruit in the Kakamega forest. The NanoBio-Institut de Chimie Moléculaire de Grenoble (NanoBio-ICMG) platform (FR 2607) is acknowledged for granting access to the electron microscopy facility.

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