Phylogenomic analysis indicates that enzymes with true CCR activity first
evolved in the of
land plants. Most if not all modern land plants and all
vascular plants are believed to have at least one functional CCR, an absolute requirement for any plant
species with lignified tissues. Most CCR homologs are highly
expressed during development, especially in
stem,
root, and
xylem cells which require the enhanced structural support provided by lignin. prior to this reduction step, the cinnamoyl-CoA's can still enter into other expansive specialized metabolic pathways. For example, feruloyl-CoA is a precursor of the
coumarin scopoletin, a compound believed to play an important role in plant pathogen response. CCR also plays a role in determining lignin composition by regulating levels of the different monomers according to its specific activity toward particular cinnamoyl-CoA's.
Monocots and
dicots, for example, tend to have very different lignin patterns: lignin found in monocots typically has a higher percentage of
p-coumaroyl alcohol-derived subunits, while lignin found in dicots is typically composed of almost entirely
coniferyl alcohol and
sinapyl alcohol subunits. Recent studies indicate that many plant species have two distinct homologs of CCR with differential activity
in planta. In some plants the two homologs vary primarily by substrate specificity. For example, CCR1 of the model
legume Medicago truncatula shows strong preference toward feruloyl-CoA (typical of most CCRs), while the plant's CCR2 exhibits a clear preference for both
p-coumaroyl- and caffeoyl-CoA. This second CCR, which is
allosterically activated by its preferred substrates but inhibited by feruloyl-CoA, is thought to act as part of a shunt pathway toward coniferaldehyde that enhances the pathway's overall flexibility and robustness in different conditions. In other cases though, the two homologs vary primarily by expression pattern. In the model plant
Arabidopsis thaliana, for instance, the CCR1 and CCR2 homologs both display higher activity toward feruloyl-CoA than other substrates, but CCR2 is only expressed transiently during
bacterial infection. Regulation of CCR expression is thought to occur primarily at the
transcriptional level. Non-transcriptional regulation of CCR, however, can be important as well. In rice (
Oryza sativa), for example, evidence suggests that the CCR1 homolog is an
effector of Rac1, a small
GTPase important for plant defense response. In this case, the Rac1 protein is proposed to activate CCR upon binding, leading to enhanced monolignol biosynthesis. Because Rac1 also activates
NADPH oxidase, which produces
peroxides critical for monolignol
polymerization, overall lignin biosynthesis is enhanced as well. == Biotechnological significance ==