EMD-26564

Tomography
EMD-26564 Deposition: 30/03/2022
Map released: 13/04/2022
Last modified: 24/05/2023
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EMD-26564

Cryo-electron tomogram of non-treated onion cell wall from scale #6 (related to Figure 2 and 4A-C of primary citation)

EMD-26564

Tomography
EMD-26564 Deposition: 30/03/2022
Map released: 13/04/2022
Last modified: 24/05/2023
Overview Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links
Sample Organism: Allium cepa
Sample: Onion epidermal periclinal cell wall

Deposition Authors: Nicolas WJ , Fassler F, Dutka P, Schur FKM, Jensen GJ, Meyerowitz EM
Cryo-electron tomography of the onion cell wall shows bimodally oriented cellulose fibers and reticulated homogalacturonan networks.
Nicolas WJ , Fassler F, Dutka P, Schur FKM, Jensen G, Meyerowitz E
(2022) Curr Biol , 32 , 2375 - 2389.e6
PUBMED: 35508170
DOI: doi:10.1016/j.cub.2022.04.024
ISSN: 0960-9822
ASTM: CUBLE2
Abstract:
One hallmark of plant cells is their cell wall. They protect cells against the environment and high turgor and mediate morphogenesis through the dynamics of their mechanical and chemical properties. The walls are a complex polysaccharidic structure. Although their biochemical composition is well known, how the different components organize in the volume of the cell wall and interact with each other is not well understood and yet is key to the wall's mechanical properties. To investigate the ultrastructure of the plant cell wall, we imaged the walls of onion (Allium cepa) bulbs in a near-native state via cryo-focused ion beam milling (cryo-FIB milling) and cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET). This allowed the high-resolution visualization of cellulose fibers in situ. We reveal the coexistence of dense fiber fields bathed in a reticulated matrix we termed "meshing," which is more abundant at the inner surface of the cell wall. The fibers adopted a regular bimodal angular distribution at all depths in the cell wall and bundled according to their orientation, creating layers within the cell wall. Concomitantly, employing homogalacturonan (HG)-specific enzymatic digestion, we observed changes in the meshing, suggesting that it is-at least in part-composed of HG pectins. We propose the following model for the construction of the abaxial epidermal primary cell wall: the cell deposits successive layers of cellulose fibers at -45° and +45° relative to the cell's long axis and secretes the surrounding HG-rich meshing proximal to the plasma membrane, which then migrates to more distal regions of the cell wall.