Cambridge researchers have captured the visible nanostructure of living wood for the first time using an advanced low-temperature scanning electron microscope.

Understanding how the components of wood come together to make super strong structures is important for understanding both how plants mature, and for new materials design.

Paul Dupree

There is increasing interest around the world in using timber as a lighter, more sustainable construction alternative to steel and concrete. While wood has been used in buildings for millennia, its mechanical properties have not, as yet, measured up to all modern building standards for major superstructures. This is due partly to a limited understanding of the precise structure of wood cells.

探花直播research, today in the journal Frontiers in Plant Science, has also identified the plant Arabidopsis thaliana as a suitable model to help direct future forestry breeding programmes.

Dr Jan Lyczakowski, the paper鈥檚 first author from Cambridge 探花直播鈥檚 Department of Biochemistry, who is now based at Jagiellonian 探花直播, said, 鈥淚t is the molecular architecture of wood that determines its strength, but until now we didn鈥檛 know the precise molecular arrangement of cylindrical structures called macrofibrils in the wood cells. This new technique has allowed us to see the composition of the macrofibrils, and how the molecular arrangement differs between plants, and it helps us understand how this might impact on wood density and strength.鈥

探花直播main building blocks of wood are the secondary walls around each wood cell, which are made of a matrix of large polymers called cellulose and hemicellulose, and impregnated with lignin. Trees such as the giant sequoia can only achieve their vast heights because of these secondary cell walls, which provide a rigid structure around the cells in their trunks.

探花直播team from Cambridge 探花直播鈥檚 Department of Biochemistry and Sainsbury Laboratory (SLCU) adapted low-temperature scanning electron microscopy (cryo-SEM) to image the nanoscale architecture of tree cell walls in their living state. This revealed the microscopic detail of the secondary cell wall macrofibrils, which are 1000 times narrower than the width of a human hair.

To compare different trees, they collected wood samples from spruce, gingko and poplar trees in the Cambridge 探花直播 Botanic Garden. Samples were snap-frozen down to minus 200掳C to preserve the cells in their live hydrated state, then coated in an ultra-thin platinum film three nanometres thick to give good visible contrast under the microscope.

鈥淥ur cryo-SEM is a significant advance over previously used techniques and has allowed us to image hydrated wood cells for the first time鈥, said Dr Raymond Wightman, Microscopy Core Facility Manager at SLCU. 鈥淚t has revealed that there are macrofibril structures with a diameter exceeding 10 nanometres in both softwood and hardwood species, and confirmed they are common across all trees studied.鈥

Cryo-SEM is a powerful imaging tool to help understand various processes underlying plant development. Previous microscopy of wood was limited to dehydrated wood samples that had to be either dried, heated or chemically processed before they could be imaged.

探花直播team also imaged the secondary cell walls of Arabidopsis thaliana, an annual plant widely used as the standard reference plant for genetics and molecular biology research. They found that it too had prominent macrofibril structures. This discovery means that Arabidopsis could be used as a model for further research on wood architecture. Using a collection of Arabidopsis plants with different mutations relating to their secondary cell wall formation, the team was able to study the involvement of specific molecules in the formation and maturation of macrofibrils.

Dr Matthieu Bourdon, a research associate at SLCU, said, 鈥 探花直播variants of Arabidopsis allowed us to determine the contribution of different molecules - like cellulose, xylan and lignin - to macrofibril formation and maturation. As a result, we are now developing a better understanding of the processes involved in assembling cell walls.鈥

探花直播wealth of Arabidopsis genetic resources offers a valuable tool to further study the complex deposition of secondary cell wall polymers, and their role in defining the fine structure of cell walls and how these mature into wood.

鈥淰isualising the molecular architecture of wood allows us to investigate how changing the arrangement of certain polymers within it might alter its strength,鈥 said Professor Paul Dupree, a co-author of the study in Cambridge鈥檚 Department of Biochemistry. 鈥淯nderstanding how the components of wood come together to make super strong structures is important for understanding both how plants mature, and for new materials design.鈥

鈥淭here is increasing interest around the world in using timber as a lighter and greener construction material,鈥 added Dupree. 鈥淚f we can increase the strength of wood, we may start seeing more major constructions moving away from steel and concrete to timber.鈥

Professor Dupree and Dr Lyczakowski are involved in the Leverhulme Trust funded where a team of biochemists, plant scientists, architects, mathematicians and chemists at the 探花直播 of Cambridge is working towards better understanding of wood structure, modification and application. 探花直播researchers are hoping they can make wooden skyscrapers, and even wooden cars, a reality by re-engineering the structure of wood in order to make better materials for construction and manufacturing. Their work was recently showcased at the .

This study was supported by the Leverhulme Trust Centre for Natural Material Innovation, US Department of Energy, BBSRC, ERC and Gatsby Charitable Foundation.

Reference

J. Lyczakowski et al. 鈥楽tructural imaging of native cryo-preserved secondary cell walls reveals the presence of macrofibrils and their formation requires normal cellulose, lignin and xylan biosynthesis.鈥 Frontiers in Plant Science (2019) DOI:10.3389/fpls.2019.01398



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