The complex enzymatic machinery that assembles cellulose chains spans the plasma membrane, with one part on the cytoplasmic side positioned to bind the substrate, UDP-glucose, and elongate the chains, and another part extending to the outside, responsible for exporting the cellulose molecules to the extracellular space.
B.
Freeze-fracture electron microscopy shows a cellulose synthesis complex, or rosette, composed of six large particles arranged in a regular hexagon with a diameter of about 30 nm. Several proteins, including the catalytic subunit of cellulose synthase, make up this structure. Each of the six particles of the rosette most likely contains three cellulose synthase molecules, each synthesizing a single cellulose chain.
C.
In one working model of cellulose synthesis, cellulose chains are initiated by the transfer of a glucose residue from UDP-glucose to a “primer” glucose already bound to cellulose synthase on the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane, to form a disaccharide. As addition of further glucose residues lengthens the chain, it is extruded through a channel formed by the transmembrane helices of cellulose synthase and, on the outer surface of the plasma membrane, joins growing chains from neighboring cellulose synthase molecules to form a cellulose microfibril.
D.
Polymers of more than 6 to 8 glucose units are insoluble in water, promoting microfibril crystallization. There is no definite length for a cellulose polymer; synthesis is highly processive, and some polymers are as long as 15,000 glucose units.