“…In plants, multiple functions have been identified for PEL, and there is some suggestion that it is involved in pollen, anthers, pistils, and developing tracheary elements (Wing et al, 1990;Rogers et al, 1992;Wu et al, 1996;Kulikauskas and McCormick, 1997;Domingo et al, 1998;Milioni et al, 2001), fruit softening and ripening (Dominguez-Puigjaner et al, 1997;Medina-Escobar et al, 1997;Nunan et al, 2001;Pua et al, 2001), lateral root emergence (Laskowski et al, 2006), cotton fiber elongation (Wang et al, 2010), leaf senescence (Wu et al, 2013), and susceptibility to plant pathogens (Vogel et al, 2002). It has also been shown to be expressed in a wide range of tissues (Palusa et al, 2007;Sun and van Nocker, 2010). In addition, recent research has revealed that the overexpression of aspen PtxtPL1-27 can increase the solubility of wood matrix polysaccharides (Biswal et al, 2014).…”