A soil-binding polysaccharide complex released from root hairs functions in rhizosheath formation

2021 
To elucidate factors involved in rhizosheath formation, wild type (WT) barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Pallas) and a root hairless mutant, bald root barley (brb), were investigated with a combination of physiological, biochemical and immunochemical assays. When grown in soil, WT barley roots bound [~]5-fold more soil than brb per unit root length. High molecular weight (HMW) polysaccharide exudates of brb roots had less soil-binding capacity than those of WT root exudates. Carbohydrate and glycan monoclonal antibody analyses of HMW polysaccharide exudates indicated differing glycan profiles. Relative to WT plants, root exudates of brb had reduced signals for arabinogalactan-protein (AGP), extensin and heteroxylan epitopes than brb. In contrast, the brb root exudate contained [~]25-fold more detectable xyloglucan epitope relative to WT. Epitope detection chromatography indicated that the increased detection of xyloglucan in brb exudates was due to enhanced abundance of a neutral polymer. Exudate preparations from brb had decreased amounts of an acidic form of xyloglucan associated with root-hair located glycoprotein and heteroxylan epitopes and with soil-binding properties. Therefore, in addition to physically structuring soil particles, root hairs facilitate rhizosheath formation by releasing a soil-binding polysaccharide complex. One sentence summaryThe root exudate of a root hairless mutant of barley, relative to wild type, has an altered pattern of polysaccharide epitopes and lesser amounts of an acidic soil-binding polysaccharide complex.
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