Abstract:
Trees play a pivotal role in the global carbon cycle through the fixation and storage of
carbon as polysaccharide and phenolic biopolymers in the secondary cell walls of
xylem fibre cells (wood). Driven by the need to mitigate climate change, the utilization
of wood as a source of renewable lignocellulosic biomass is undergoing a
technological renaissance. Fundamental research in understanding and modelling
xylogenesis as a developmental program remains crucial, as most carbon in living
biomass is present in the secondary growth tissues of terrestrial plants. Although
systems biology approaches in poplar, Eucalyptus and Arabidopsis have made massive strides in unravelling the complex genetic regulation underpinning
xylogenesis, we know little of how the genome-bearing organelles of the cell, the
plastids, and mitochondria, are integrated into the system. As the location of many
carbon metabolic pathways in the cell, plastids and mitochondria play a crucial role in
carbon allocation during wood formation. Despite this, plastid and mitochondrial
biology have largely been ignored in the study of xylogenesis, and the vast majority of
plant organellar research is focused on photosynthetic tissues.
The work presented in this thesis aimed to provide a basis for understanding the role
of plastid and mitochondrial biology during xylogenesis, using Eucalyptus as a model.
This was achieved through three research objectives: (i.) The analysis of coregulated
expression modules of nuclear-encoded plastid and mitochondrial-targeted genes
generated from 156 xylem transcriptomes from a Eucalyptus grandis × E. urophylla
F2 interspecific backcross population; (ii.) The assembly and annotation of the plastid
and mitochondrial genomes of E. grandis, along with analysis of intergenomic DNA
transfers and their expression; and (iii.) Comprehensive analysis of the transcriptomes
of E. grandis plastids and mitochondria using total RNA, polyA-selected RNA, and
small RNA sequencing data to understand the regulation of plastids and mitochondria
in three tissues representing carbon source (mature leaf), sink (immature xylem) and
transport (secondary phloem) tissues.
This research has improved our understanding of carbon allocation during
xylogenesis, provided a resource for future studies in Eucalyptus organellar biology
and is the first to look at the transcriptomes of secondary growth plastids and mitochondria. Important findings from this work include that the regulation of plastid
and mitochondrial metabolism is highly integrated with xylem development and the
circadian clock. Plastid specific associations with the central circadian clock and
epigenetic regulation show that the central functions of plastid retrograde signalling in
leaf and green vascular tissues are conserved in wood formation. Finally, analysis of
organellar transcriptomes in multiple tissues has shown for the first time that nuclearencoded
polymerases uniquely drive plastidial gene expression during wood formation
and that (as yet unknown) nuclear-encoded RNA-binding proteins may be involved in
the active upregulation of selected plastid-encoded genes to facilitate nonphotosynthetic
metabolism in the plastids of tree sink tissues.
In conclusion, the thesis makes an evidence-based argument for a specific plastid
type – the xyloplast – to advance research in the field of wood formation and organellar
biology.