Subscriber access provided by University of Massachusetts Amherst Libraries
Agricultural and Environmental Chemistry
NADP-malate dehydrogenase of sweet sorghum improves salt tolerance of Arabidopsis thaliana Yuanyuan Guo, Yushuang Song, Hongxiang Zheng, Yi Zhang, Jianrong Guo, and Na Sui J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • Publication Date (Web): 30 May 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 30, 2018
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 32
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
1
NADP-malate dehydrogenase of sweet sorghum improves salt tolerance of Arabidopsis thaliana
2
Yuanyuan Guo+, Yushuang Song+, Hongxiang Zheng, Yi Zhang, Jianrong Guo, Na Sui*
3
Shandong Provincial Key Laboratory of Plant Stress, College of Life Science, Shandong Normal
4
University, Jinan, 250014, China.
5 6
+
Yuanyuan Guo and Yushuang Song have contributed equally to this work.
7 8
*Corresponding author.
9
Dr. Na Sui
10
Shandong Provincial Key Laboratory of Plant Stress
11
College of Life Science
12
Shandong Normal University
13
Jinan
14
Shandong
15
China
16
E-mail:
[email protected] 17
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 2 of 32
18
Abstract
19
Sweet sorghum is a C4 crop that shows high salt tolerance and high yield. NADP-malate dehydrogenase
20
(NADP-ME) is a crucial enzyme of the C4 pathway. The regulatory mechanism of NADP-ME remains
21
unclear. In this study, we isolated SbNADP-ME from sweet sorghum. The open reading frame of
22
SbNADP-ME is 1911 bp and 637 amino acid residues. Quantitative real-time PCR analysis showed that
23
SbNADP-ME transcription in sweet sorghum was enhanced by salt stress. The SbNADP-ME transcript
24
level was highest under exposure to 150 mM NaCl. Arabidopsis overexpressing SbNADP-ME showed
25
increased germination rate and root length under NaCl treatments. At the seedling stage, physiological
26
photosynthesis parameters, chlorophyll content, PSII photochemical efficiency, and PSI oxidoreductive
27
activity in the wild type decreased more severely than in the overexpression lines, but less than in
28
T-DNA insertion mutants, under salt stress. Overexpression of SbNADP-ME in Arabidopsis may also
29
increase osmotic adjustment and scavenging activity on DPPH and decrease membrane peroxidation.
30
These results suggest that SbNADP-ME overexpression in Arabidopsis increases salt tolerance and
31
alleviates PSII and PSI photoinhibition under salt stress by improving photosynthetic capacity.
32
Key words: SbNADP-ME; photosynthesis; salt stress; sweet sorghum
33
Introduction
34
Sweet sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) is an annual C4 crop that shows a rapid growth rate and
35
high efficiency of biomass accumulation. It is used for ethanol production
36
humans and livestock. Amongst widely grown crop species, sorghum shows one of the highest degrees
37
of stress tolerance. 3,4 Soil salinity is an important global ecological problem. Salinity is not only a major
38
factor contributing to environmental deterioration but is also a major abiotic stress in plant agriculture
39
worldwide. 5,6 It is estimated that 6% of the world’s land and 30% of the world’s irrigated areas already
40
suffer from salinity problems. 7,8 Plant growth is a complex and tightly regulated physiological process;
41
with regard to aboveground plant parts, salt stress induces damage mainly on the photosynthetic
42
apparatus. Photosynthesis is crucial for the survival of plants. Salt stress suppresses photosynthesis and
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
1,2
and as a food source for
Page 3 of 32
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
9,10,11
43
cell growth.
44
diffusion through the stomata and the mesophyll 12,13 or altering photosynthetic metabolism. 14 Salt stress
45
can severely disrupt the leaf photosynthetic machinery and chloroplast structure. 2
46
The effects may be direct by decreasing CO2 availability caused by limitation of CO2
Salt stress may inhibit photosynthesis by inducing photoinhibition. Photosystem II (PSII) 15
47
photochemical efficiency of light-adapted leaves is modified by salt stress.
48
reaction centers is decreased by salt stress.
49
under salt stress, which might be attributed to damage to the PSII oxidation side in the oxygen-evolving
50
complex. Alternatively, on the PSII reductive side, electron transport from the primary quinone acceptor
51
(QA) to the secondary quinone acceptor (QB) may be blocked.
52
cucumber seedlings showed that PSII activity was inhibited mainly on the receptor side, in which
53
electron transport from QA to QB was blocked. 19
16,17
The activity of PSII
PSII photochemical efficiency may also be inhibited
18
For example, previous research on
54
Malate dehydrogenase (ME) is widely distributed among eukaryotes and prokaryotes. It is a highly
55
active enzyme and one of the crucial enzymes involved in the metabolism of malic acid in the body. The
56
enzyme catalyzes the decarboxylation of malic acid to pyruvate and CO2, while NADP+ is reduced to
57
NADPH.
58
namely NAD-dependent ME (NAD-ME) and NADP-dependent ME (NADP-ME).
59
sorghum is primarily of the NADP-ME type, and NAD-ME activity is not observed.
60
be divided into photosynthetic NADP-ME and non-photosynthetic NADP-ME types according to the
61
specific enzyme function.
62
identified in plants. 24 Immunophenotyping results show that this protein is located in the chloroplast of
63
vascular sheath cells and is regulated by light. 25
20
MEs can be divided into two major protein types on the basis of their cofactor preference,
23
21
Activity of ME in 22
NADP-ME can
The NADP-ME of maize was the first photosynthetic NADP-ME to be
64
NADP-ME is a critical enzyme of the C4 pathway. The main role of this enzyme is to catalyze
65
oxidative decarboxylation of malic acid to provide CO2 for the photosynthetic carbon fixation of the
66
Rubisco enzyme, which is closely associated with photosynthesis.
67
mechanism of the crucial enzymes involved in the C4 pathway remain unclear. Therefore, it is important
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
26
At present, the regulatory
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 4 of 32
68
to study the mechanism of NADP-ME activity in the C4 pathway. Previous studies have shown that
69
NADP-ME expression in tobacco may lead to changes in stomatal function and plant water use
70
efficiency.
71
up-regulated and increased the drought and low temperature tolerance of the plant. 28 NADP-ME activity
72
is also increased in response to drought stress and damage to the photosynthetic apparatus is reduced in
73
wheat.
74
activity may be enhanced in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), which can affect plant development,
75
stress tolerance, and specific diurnal and nocturnal cellular processes.
76
OsNADP-ME4 gene of rice enhances the tolerance to salt and drought stresses of transgenic Arabidopsis.
77
32
78
previous study we analyzed the transcriptomes of salt-sensitive and salt-tolerant sweet sorghum inbred
79
lines by high-throughput Illumina RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq).
80
treatment, the differentially expressed genes were mainly concentrated in three metabolic pathways,
81
namely light energy capture and absorption, photosynthesis, and carbon fixation and sucrose metabolism.
82
The expression level of NADP-ME in the salt-tolerant inbred line M-81E was extremely high, whereas
83
the expression level of NADP-ME in the salt-sensitive inbred line Roma was unchanged. These findings
84
indicate that NADP-ME may play an important role in carbon fixation and salt-resistance processes. 33
29
23,27
Under drought and low temperature stress, the expression of NADP-ME of wheat was
The expression of NADP-ME may also be induced by salt stress.
28,30
31
Cytosolic NADP-ME2
Over-expression of the
However, the function and regulatory mechanism of NADP-ME in sweet sorghum are unknown. In a
33
The results showed that under salt
85
However, little is known about the regulatory function of sweet sorghum NADP-ME in
86
salt-resistance processes. In this experiment, we isolated the SbNADP-ME gene from sweet sorghum,
87
transformed it into Arabidopsis and investigated the function of SbNADP-ME during salt stress. Results
88
of this study might provide important information for understanding the mechanism between
89
photosynthetic efficiency and salt tolerance.
90
Materials and Methods
91
Plant material, cultivation and treatment
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 5 of 32
92 93
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Seeds of the sweet sorghum inbred line M-81E was used in the study. Sweet sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) is a variant of sorghum. Dry seeds were stored in a refrigerator at 4°C before use.
94
Arabidopsis accession Col-0 was selected as the wild-type (WT) control. The SALK_064163
95
(nadp-me4), CS855818 (nadp-me4-1), SALK_036898 (nadp-me1), SALK_073818C (nadp-me2),
96
CS833585 (nadp-me2-1), and SALK_139336C (nadp-me3) were obtained from the Arabidopsis
97
Biological Resource Center (Columbus, OH, USA). SALK_064163 is a mutant of At1G79750
98
(AtNADP-ME4), CS855818 is a mutant of At1G79750, SALK_036898 is a mutant of At2G19900
99
(AtNADP-ME1), SALK_073818C is a mutant of At5G11670 (AtNADP-ME2), CS833585 is a mutant of
100
At5G11670, and SALK_139336C is a mutant of At5G25880 (AtNADP-ME3). The homozygosity of
101
each mutant for the T-DNA insertion was verified by PCR.
102
Sweet sorghum seeds of uniform size and no imperfections were selected, and were soaked with
103
water for 10 h. Plants grown under 28°C/20°C (day/night) with a 14 h/10 h (light/dark) photoperiod, and
104
light intensity of about 320 ± 50 μmol m−2 s−1. The relative humidity was 58%–64% and 48%–54%
105
during the day and night, respectively. Plump seeds were selected and sown in plastic pots containing
106
river sand. Each pot was planted with seven individual seedlings. Seedlings were watered with water
107
first, and then watered with half-strength Hoagland nutrient solution after two leaves had developed.
108
When three leaves had formed, the seedlings were watered with full-strength Hoagland nutrient solution.
109
At the four-leaf stage, some seedlings were used to isolate NADP-ME gene and the remaining seedlings
110
were treated with 0, 50, 100, 150, or 200 mM NaCl for 48 h. Leaves from the treated seedlings were
111
stored at −80°C for determination of the expression pattern of the NADP-ME gene. Three replicates were
112
included for each treatment.
113
Seeds of Arabidopsis Col-0 and each mutant were sterilized, washed and sown on half-strength
114
Murashige and Skoog (1/2 MS) medium supplemented with 0, 50, 100, or 150 mM NaCl and stratified
115
for three days at 4°C. After stratification, the seeds were transferred to a culture room and incubated at
116
25°C/20°C (day/night) under a 14 h/10 h (light/dark) photoperiod and light intensity of 150 μmol m−2 s−1.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 6 of 32
117
The root length of the germinated seeds was measured after germination for 7 days. To study the effect
118
of 100 mM NaCl treatment on the root length of Arabidopsis, we cultured seedlings of Arabidopsis
119
Col-0 and each mutant on 1/2 MS medium lacking supplementary NaCl for 3 days, and then seedlings of
120
similar growth were transferred to 1/2 MS medium supplemented with 50 mM NaCl for further culture.
121
After 3 days, the seedlings were transferred to 1/2 MS medium supplemented with 100 mM NaCl. The
122
primary root length of the seedlings was measured after culture for 3 days.
123
For adult-stage experiments, the Arabidopsis seeds were plated on 1/2 MS medium. After
124
stratification at 4°C for 3 days, the plates were transferred to a growth room. The seedlings were then
125
planted in nutrient soil after 10 days and watered with 1/2 MS solution. After 12 days, plants were
126
treated with 0, 50 or 100 mM NaCl. Physiological parameters, such as photosynthetic parameters,
127
chlorophyll content, chlorophyll fluorescence, and PSI activity, were determined.
128
Cloning the sequence of SbNADP-ME
129
Total RNA was isolated from leaves of sweet sorghum using the Total Plant RNA Extraction Kit
130
(Karroten 1103) in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions. The full-length NADP-ME gene
131
was
132
(http://ensembl.gramene.org/Sorghum_bicolor/Info/Index). We obtained the sequence of SbNADP-ME
133
using
134
(5′-CAGCGATAACTACAACATTGC-3′).
135
Bioinformatic analysis of SbNADP-ME
determined
the
primers
from
the
ME-Q-5′
Sorghum
bicolor
reference
(5′-CTCTCTCTCTCTCTCTCTCCA-3′)
and
genome
ME-Q-3′
136
The BLASTp and SMART online tools, and the DNAstar, MegAlign, DNAman, and FASTTREE
137
software were used for homology analysis, phylogenetic tree construction, prediction of functional
138
domains and functional classification, and for the analysis of the phylogenetic relationships of the amino
139
acid sequences of SbNADP-ME with NADP-ME genes from other plant species.
140
The expression analysis of SbNADP-ME in sweet sorghum under salt stress
141
To evaluate the expression profiles of SbNADP-ME in leaves, NADP-ME-overexpressing
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 7 of 32
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
142
Arabidopsis lines grown under salt stress conditions were investigated. Quantitative real-time PCR
143
(qPCR) was performed using the primers ME-5 (5′-GGCTTCCATCAATGAGAG-3′) and ME-3
144
(5′-AGTCCAGGTATATGCTTGT-3′) to amplify SbNADP-ME. Amplification of the ACTIN gene was
145
used as an internal control. The internal primer pairs of Actin-F (5′-TGGCATCTCTCAGCACATTCC-3′)
146
and
147
(5′-AAGCTGGGGTTTTATGAATGG-3′) and Actin 3 (5′-TTGTCACACACAAGTGCATCAT-3′),
148
were designed in accordance with the ACTIN nucleotide sequences of sweet sorghum and Arabidopsis,
149
respectively.
150
Plasmid construction and Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of Arabidopsis
Actin-R
(5′-AATGGCTCTCTCGGCTTGC-3′).
and
Actin
5
151
The nucleotide sequence of SbNADP-ME was inserted into the vector pCAMBIA3300 to generate
152
the construct pCAMBIA3300-NADP-ME. The construct was transformed into Arabidopsis using the
153
Agrobacterium-mediated inflorescences infected transformation method. Transgenic plants were
154
identified by PCR with a gene-specific 35S forward primer (5′-GACGCACAATCCCACTATCC-3′) and
155
NADP-ME reverse primer (5′-CAGCGATAACTACAACATTGC-3′) after the first screening with
156
kanamycin. Nineteen individual transgenic lines were obtained. Lines of T10 and T24 from the T3
157
generation were used for further analysis.
158
Detection of the NADP-ME T-DNA insertional Arabidopsis mutants and double mutant
159
To detect homozygous plants, the following gene-specific primers were used for nadp-me4:
160
MEL064163
(5′-AGGGTTAGGAGATCTTGGATG-3′)
161
(5′-CTCCACGTATAGGCCTCTTC-3′);
162
(5′-TCGAAGGTGGGAGGGTTGAG-3′) and ME855818 (5′-CCATCATAGCCATATACTTCT-3′); for
163
nadp-me1:
164
(5′-GCATACCTTCCTCTTTCTTG-3′);
165
(5′-TGGCTATCACTGTACTTAGAC-3′) and ME073818C (5′-TGGTATTTCTGACGTCTACG-3′); for
166
nadp-me2-1:
were
were
MEL036898
MEL833585
for
and nadp-me4-1:
(5′-TCAACGGTAGAGACGGTATGT-3′) for
ME064163
nadp-me2:
and
were
(5′-GCAACTGGCCAGGAATATG-3′)
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
MEL855818
ME036898 MEL073818C
and
ME833585
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
for
167
(5′-ACGGTAGTTTCTGTACACA-3′);
168
(5′-CGGAAGAAGATTTGGCTTGT-3′)
169
Plants generating no PCR products with the gene-specific primers were then evaluated using the
170
gene-specific forward primer and the T-DNA insertion left border specific primer LBb1
171
(5′-GCGTGGACCGCTTGCTGCAACT-3′). The nadp-me2 4 double mutant was obtained by crossing
172
the nadp-me2 and nadp-me4 mutants.
173
Analysis of seed germination and root length of Arabidopsis
and
nadp-me3:
Page 8 of 32
ME139336C
were
MEL139336C
(5′-ACGGAAGTTTCTGTAGACA-3′).
174
Seed germination rate was calculated after 1, 3, and 7 days as follows: Germination percentage =
175
(Germinated seed number/germinated total number) × 100. Germination potential is an index of seed
176
germination rate and germination uniformity. Germination potential (%) was calculated as follows:
177
Germination potential = (Germinated seed number at germination peak/Test seed number) × 100. 2 The
178
root length of the different lines was measured after 7 days. The root lengths were measured using a
179
ruler. Three replicates were performed for each treatment.
180
Determination of photosynthetic characteristics
181
The net photosynthetic rate (Pn), stomatal conductance (Gs), intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci)
182
and transpiration rate (Tr) were measured by portable TPS-2 portable photosynthesis system (PP
183
Systems, Amesbury, MA, USA). The measurements were conducted from 10:00 to 12:00 under light
184
intensity of 1000 μmol m−2 s−1. When the measurement was carried out outdoors, the seedlings were
185
allowed to adapt to light for 30 min and the 15 treatments were repeated.
186
Chlorophyll content analysis
187
Chlorophyll (Chl) content was determined following the method we described previously. (17)
188
Arabidopsis leaves (0.2 g fresh weight [FW]) were extracted for 48 h in 80% acetone in the dark.
189
Chlorophyll content was calculated by determining the absorption at 645 and 663 nm with a TU-1810
190
ultraviolet-spectrophotometer. The contents of Chl a and Chl b were calculated as follows: Ca (mg/L) =
191
12.7A663 − 2.69A645; Cb (mg/L) = 22.9A645 − 4.68A663.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 9 of 32
192 193
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Determination of chlorophyll fluorescence Chlorophyll fluorescence was detected using a portable fluorometer (FMS2, Hansatech, King’s 34
194
Lynn, UK) using the method of Kooten and Snel.
195
centers open was determined with modulated light. Maximal fluorescence (Fm) with all reaction centers
196
closed was determined by adapting the leaves in darkness for more than 15 min with saturating light of
197
8000 μmol m−2 s−1. The leaf was then illuminated by an actinic light of 500 μmol m−2 s−1. Steady-state
198
fluorescence (Fs) was recorded when the leaf attained steady-state photosynthesis (a time of 300 s
199
illumination is standard for induction of steady-state fluorescence Fs). Maximal fluorescence in the
200
light-adapted state (Fm′) was determined with additional saturating light of 8000 μmol m−2 s−1. PSII
201
maximal photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm) was expressed as: Fv/Fm = (Fm – Fo)/Fm. PSII actual
202
photochemical efficiency (ΦPSII) was expressed as: ΦPSII = (Fm′ – Fs)/Fm′. Non-photochemical
203
quenching (NPQ) was calculated as: NPQ = Fm/Fm′ – 1. Photochemical quenching (qp) was calculated as
204
qp = (Fm′ − Fs)/(Fm − Fo′). 35
205
Determination of the oxidoreductive activity of PSI
206
Minimal fluorescence (Fo) with all PSII reaction
The oxidoreductive activity of PSI (△I/Io) was expressed by determining the absorption at 820 nm 36
Before measurement of △I/Io in vivo,
207
with a Plant Efficiency Analyzer (PEA Senior, Hansatech).
208
leaves were adapted in the dark for about 30 min. The first reliable measurement time point for
209
fluorescence change was at 20 μs, and the first measurement time point for transmission change was at
210
400 μs. The time constant used for the transmission measurements was 100 μs. The light intensity used
211
for the transmission measurements was 3000 μmol m−2 s−1 and was produced by four 650 nm
212
light-emitting diodes (LEDs). The far-red source was a QDDH73520 LED (Quantum Devices Inc.,
213
Barneveld, WI, USA) filtered at 720 ± 5 nm. The modulated (33.3 kHz) far-red measuring light was
214
provided by an OD820 LED (Opto Diode Corp., Newbury Park, CA, USA) and filtered at 830 ± 20 nm.
215
Command execution, such as turning on and off the LEDs, took approximately 250 μs. Commands for
216
activating the red light and starting the measurement were synchronized to correct for the delay; for the
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 10 of 32
217
far-red light, there was a 250 μs delay between turning on the far-red light and initiation of
218
measurement.
219
Fresh mass and dry mass of seedlings
220
The plant material was rinsed in distilled water. Water on the plant was then absorbed by tissue
221
paper. The seedlings were weighed to determine the fresh mass (FM). The dry mass (DM) was measured
222
after drying the fresh material at 70°C for 4 days. For each treatment, three replicates were performed.
223
Quantitative real-time PCR analysis of salt-responsive genes
224
We evaluated the expression profiles of nine salt-responsive genes (KIN1, RD29B, RD22, P5CS1,
225
GSTU5, SOS1, NHX1, SOD, and APX) in WT, transgenic Arabidopsis plants, and T-DNA mutant
226
Arabidopsis lines grown under salt stress. The relative transcript level of each gene was determined by
227
(qPCR) in Arabidopsis seedlings that were treated with 100 mM NaCl for 48 h. The qPCR analysis was
228
performed with the primers as follows: KIN1: S: 5′-AAGAATGCCTTCCAAGCCGGTCAG-3′ and A:
229
5′-TACACTCTTTCCCGCCTGTTGTGC-3′; RD29B: S: 5′-AGAAGGAATGGTGGGGAAAG-3′ and A:
230
5′-CAACTCACTTCCACCGGAAT-3′; RD22: S: 5′-ATAATCTTTTGACTTTCGATTTTACCG-3′ and
231
A: 5′-CTTGGACGTTGGTACTTTTCTCG-3′; AtP5CS1: S: 5′-TAGCACCCGAAGAGCCCCAT-3′ and
232
A:
233
S:5′-ATGGCTGAGAAAGAAGAAGTGAAGC-3′
234
5′-TTAAGAAGATCTCACTCTCTCTGCC-3′; SOS1: S: 5′-TTCATCATCCTCACAATGGCTCTAA-3′
235
and A: 5′-CCCTCATCAAGCATCTCCCAGTA-3′; NHX1: S: 5′-GGTCTGATAAGTGCGTATG-3′ and
236
A: 5′-GCTCTCCGTTACATTGTG-3′; SOD: S:
237
5′-TAGGACCAGTCAGAGGAAT-3′; and APX: S:
238
5′-GCCACCAGTAACTTCAACME-3′. Amplification of the ACTIN gene was used as an internal
239
control, and the internal primers of Actin 5 (5′-AAGCTGGGGTTTTATGAATGG-3′) and Actin 3
240
(5′-TTGTCACACACAAGTGCATCAT-3′) were designed in accordance with the ACTIN nucleotide
241
sequence of sweet sorghum and Arabidopsis, respectively.
5′-TTTCAGTTCCAACGCCAGTAGA-3′;
AtGSTU5: and
A:
5′-GTATCTCAACAGGACCACAT-3′ and A: 5′-GTATCCACATTGCTCTTAGG-3′ and A:
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 11 of 32
242
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Determination of proline content
243
For proline determination, a standard curve was first developed. Leaf samples (0.5 g) were cut and
244
mixed in a centrifuge tube to which 5 mL of 3% (w/v) aqueous sulfosalicylic acid was added. After
245
incubation at 100oC for 10 min, the solution was centrifuged at 3000 rpm for 5 min to obtain the proline
246
extract. Finally, 4 ml toluene was added to the reaction mixture and absorbance at 520 nm was measured.
247
The proline content was calculated as follows: proline content (μg g−1 FW) = [(μg proline ml−1 × ml
248
toluene)/[(g sample)/5].
249
Assay of scavenging ability on 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl radicals
250
Leaf sample (0.5 g) was ground into powder, and 25 mL deionized water was added. After
251
incubation at 100oC for 1 h, 0.5 mmol l−1 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) was added to the
252
mixture and placed in the dark at 37oC for 20 min. The absorption was determined at 514 nm. The
253
parameter EC50 represents the effective concentration at which 50% of the DPPH radicals were
254
scavenged.
255
Measurement of malondialdehyde content
256
Leaf sample (0.4 g) was ground into pulp, and 5 ml of 0.5% (w/v) trichloroacetic acid (TCA) was
257
added to the tube. The mixture was incubated at 100oC for 10 min, and then was placed into ice-cold
258
water for 1 h. After centrifugation at 3000 rpm for 15 min, an equal volume of (w/v) 0.6% TBA was
259
added to the supernatant. The absorbance was measured at 532 and 600 nm. The malondialdehyde
260
(MDA) content was calculated as follows: MDA content (μmol g−1 FW) = (OD532 − OD600) ×
261
supernatant volume (ml)/155 × sample (g).
262
Statistical analysis
263
Data were transformed (arcsine) prior to the statistical analysis to ensure homogeneity of variance.
264
All analyses were performed with SPSS Version 16.0 (SPSS, Chicago, IL, USA). Multiple comparisons
265
between different conditions were performed using Duncan’s multiple range test at the 0.05 significance
266
level. Figures were drawn by origin data analysis with Sigma Plot 10.0 (SPSS).
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
267
Results
268
Sequence analysis of SbNADP-ME
Page 12 of 32
269
The SbNADP-ME of sweet sorghum contained two structural domains (Figure S1A) and a complete
270
open reading frame of 1911 bp consisting of 637 amino acids with a molecular mass of 15.7 kDa (Figure
271
S1B). The highly conserved structural and functional domains were located between 161 and 342 amino
272
acids. The presence of the Malic_M structural domain in the N-terminal region indicated that the
273
NADP-ME protein was a member of the malic acid enzyme family (Figure S1A). To investigate
274
evolutionary relationships among plant NADP-ME genes, a phylogenetic tree of the conserved cyclin
275
box domains was constructed using the neighbor-joining method. The sweet sorghum NADP-ME
276
showed the highest identities with NADP-ME genes from Imperata cylindrica and Zea mays (Figure 1).
277
Expression of SbNADP-ME in sweet sorghum
278
The accumulation of SbNADP-ME mRNA in sweet sorghum seedlings was determined by qPCR
279
analysis. Sweet sorghum seedlings were treated with 0, 50, 100, 150, and 200 mM NaCl. As shown in
280
Figure 2A, the relative expression level of SbNADP-ME increased at first, attained its maximum level at
281
150 mM NaCl treatment, and thereafter decreased. The results revealed that 150 mM NaCl concentration
282
represented mild salt stress for the sweet sorghum line M-81E.
283
Expression of SbNADP-ME in Arabidopsis overexpression lines
284
To understand the role of NADP-ME in the plant response to salt stress, SbNADP-ME was
285
transformed into Arabidopsis (Figure S2A, B). After treatment with 0, 50, or 100 mM NaCl, the relative
286
transcript level of SbNADP-ME in the Arabidopsis overexpression lines T10 and T24 increased
287
significantly (Figure 2B).
288
Screening of homozygous mutants of Arabidopsis
289
To screen the homozygous mutants of nadp-me4 (At1G79750), nadp-me4-1 (At1G79750),
290
nadp-me1 (At2G19900), nadp-me2 (At5G11670), nadp-me2-1 (At5G11670) and nadp-me3 (At5G25880)
291
genomic locus, we amplified and sequenced the nadp-me fragments (Figure S3).
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 13 of 32
292
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Seed germination on saline soil is a frequent condition for terrestrial plants. Therefore, it is of 37
293
practical and theoretical significance to study the effects of salt stress on seed germination.
In the
294
present study, no differences in germination percentage were observed between the WT and mutant
295
Arabidopsis lines under the control condition. Under treatment with NaCl, the germination percentage,
296
germination potential, and root length of nadp-me2 and nadp-me4 were significantly lower than those of
297
the WT (Figure S4). Thus, the nadp-me2 and nadp-me4 mutants were more sensitive to salt treatment
298
than the WT. Therefore, these two salt-sensitive mutants were selected for subsequent experiments.
299
Germination percentage and root length in different Arabidopsis lines under salt stress
300
No significant difference in germination percentage and root length of the WT, Arabidopsis
301
overexpression lines, and the mutants was observed under the control condition (Figure 3A, D, E). The
302
germination percentage and root length of the WT, overexpression lines, and the mutants were all
303
inhibited by salt stress. The degree of inhibition exhibited by the mutants was greater than that of the WT
304
and overexpression lines, especially in the 100 and 150 mM NaCl treatments (Figure 3B, C). After
305
germination for 7 days, the germination percentage of the WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4, and nadp-me2
306
under 100 mM NaCl treatment was 85.6%, 89.7%, 88.3%, 80.1%, and 80.4%, respectively. Under 150
307
mM NaCl treatment, the germination percentage of the WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4, and nadp-me2 was
308
50.3%, 58.4%, 56.3%, 11.1%, and 13.3%, respectively (Figure 3D). Under 100 mM NaCl treatment, the
309
root length of the WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4, and nadp-me2 was decreased by 44.4%, 37.1%, 37.7%,
310
64.5%, and 60.8%, respectively. Under 150 mM NaCl treatment, the root length of the WT, T10, T24,
311
nadp-me4, and nadp-me2 decreased 87.7%, 74.6%, 75.1%, 98.6%, and 97.7%, respectively (Figure 3E).
312
These results indicated that overexpression of SbNADP-ME enhanced germination of Arabidopsis under
313
salt stress.
314
Effect of salt stress on photosynthetic parameters at the seedling stage
315
No significant difference in the net photosynthetic rate (Pn), intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci),
316
transpiration rate (Tr), and stomatal conductance (Gs) of WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4, nadp-me2 and
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 14 of 32
317
nadp-me2 4 was observed in the absence of NaCl treatment (Table 1). Under treatment with 100 mM
318
NaCl, Pn, Ci, Tr, and Gs of T10 and T24 were significantly higher than those of the WT, nadp-me4,
319
nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 (Table 1). Under 100 mM NaCl treatment, the Pn of the WT, T10, T24,
320
nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 decreased by 44.8%, 20.2%, 21.3%, 54.1%, 55.1%, and 63.3%,
321
respectively (Table 1). The Ci of the WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 decreased by
322
15.8%, 10.5%, 10.0%, 20.9%, 21.4%, and 26.7%, respectively (Table 1). The Tr of the WT, T10, T24,
323
nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 decreased by 51.5%, 25.1%, 26.4%, 56.1%, 58.7%, and 66.7%,
324
respectively (Table 1). The Gs of the WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 decreased by
325
39.3%, 24.5%, 28.3%, 49.3%, 50.3%, and 62.7%, respectively (Table 1). Thus, the photosynthetic
326
capacity of T10 and T24 was enhanced by overexpression of SbNADP-ME under salt stress.
327
Effect of salt stress on chlorophyll content in Arabidopsis lines
328
The content of Chl a and b decreased significantly under 100 mM NaCl treatment (Table 1). The
329
Chl a content of the WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 decreased by 21.4%, 15.3%,
330
13.9%, 26.3%, 28.2%, and 34.1%, respectively (Table 1). The Chl b content of the WT, T10, T24,
331
nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 decreased by 14.5%, 8.7%, 8.5%, 21.3%, 17.7%, and 23.8%,
332
respectively (Table 1).
333
PSI and PSII activity in Arabidopsis lines under salt stress
334
No significant differences in Fo, Fv/Fm, 1−qP, NPQ, ΦPSII, and ΔI/Io among the WT, T10, T24,
335
nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 were observed under 0 mM NaCl treatment (Table 1). However,
336
under salt treatment, the Fo, 1−qp, and NPQ of the WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4
337
were significantly increased compared with those of the controls (Table 1), whereas Fv/Fm, ΦPSII, and
338
ΔI/Io decreased under salt stress (Table 1). Under 100 mM NaCl treatment, the Fo of the WT, T10, T24,
339
nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 increased by 23.1%, 6.3%, 11.5%, 72.0%, 57.8%, and 81.7%,
340
respectively; the 1−qp of the WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 increased by 33.7%,
341
13.1%, 16.9%, 41.3%, 35.6%, and 50.0%, respectively; the NPQ of the WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4,
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 15 of 32
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
342
nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 increased by 63.5%, 30.7%, 42.9%, 100.6%, 99.3%, and 112.0%,
343
respectively. The ΦPSII in the WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 decreased by
344
14.9%, 7.0%, 5.1%, 28.1%, 29.3%, and 34.6%, respectively. The Fv/Fm of Arabidopsis overexpression
345
lines was not significantly affected by salt stress, but it decreased by 6.1%, 13.1%, 12.8%, and 23.5% in
346
the WT, nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4, respectively. The PSI activity of the WT, T10, T24,
347
nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 decreased by 24.1%, 10.0%, 12.9%, 41.2%, 38.1%, and 48.8%,
348
respectively.
349
Effect of salt stress on fresh and dry mass at the seedling stage
350
Fresh and dry mass of the WT, Arabidopsis overexpression lines, and the mutants significantly
351
decreased under salt treatment. Under 100 mM NaCl treatment, the FM of the WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4,
352
nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 decreased 30.9%, 19.0%, 15.2%, 49.1%, 46.2%, and 58.3%, respectively
353
(Table 1). The DM of the WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 decreased 38.2%, 25.6%,
354
12.9%, 51.7%, 48.6%, and 57.7%, respectively (Table 1).
355
Changes in proline and MDA content, and scavenging ability on DPPH radicals under salt stress
356
No significant difference in proline content was observed in the WT, Arabidopsis overexpression
357
lines, and the mutants under the control condition (Figure 4A). Under treatment with 100 mM NaCl,
358
proline content of these plants increased. The Arabidopsis overexpression lines contained a higher
359
proline content, followed by the WT, and the nadp-me2 4 double mutant contained the lowest proline
360
content.
361
Under the control condition, the WT, transgenic lines, and mutants all showed higher scavenging
362
abilities on DPPH radicals (Figure 4B), among which no significant difference was observed. Under
363
treatment with NaCl, the scavenging abilities on DPPH radicals decreased in the WT, transgenic plants,
364
and mutants. However, the scavenging ability remained higher in the Arabidopsis overexpression lines
365
than in the WT and mutants. The scavenging ability on DPPH radicals was lowest in the double mutant
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 16 of 32
366
nadp-me2 4. The Arabidopsis overexpression lines showed obviously better DPPH scavenging abilities
367
under salt stress than the other plants.
368
Malondialdehyde is the product of membrane peroxidation. Thus, the MDA content may reflect the
369
degree of membrane damage. Under the control condition, the MDA content was low in the WT,
370
transgenic plants, and mutants (Figure 5). After treatment with 100 mM NaCl, the MDA content of the
371
WT, T10, T24, nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 increased 74.1%, 33.23%, 39.4%, 158.2%,
372
145.9%, and 199.7, respectively.
373
Expression level of salt-responsive genes in Arabidopsis
374
To detect whether selected stress-related genes were affected by SbNADP-ME, we determined the
375
relative transcript levels of KIN1, RD29B, RD22, P5CS1, GSTU5, SOS1, NHX1, SOD, and APX in the
376
WT, Arabidopsis overexpression lines and mutants under 100 mM NaCl treatment for 48 h (Figure 6).
377
KIN1, RD29B, and RD22 were salt-related marker genes. P5CS1 is a gene associated with osmotic
378
substance synthesis. GSTU5, SOD, and APX are genes associated with oxidation. SOS1 and NHX1 are
379
genes associated with ion transport across membrane. The transcription of all of the genes was promoted
380
by overexpression of SbNADP-ME and was inhibited by deletion of SbNADP-ME.
381
Discussion
382
Sweet sorghum is primarily grown to produce sugar for syrup and is often used in animal feed. 38 It
383
is also a suitable crop for growing on saline and alkali land with high yield. Interestingly, previous
384
research has shown that the brix of salt-tolerant sweet sorghum remains stable or is even increased by
385
salt stress. The brix of salt-sensitive species, however, decreases under salt stress.
386
the main source of carbon and energy in the sink tissues is sucrose. The accumulation of stalk sugar in
387
sweet sorghum depends on the synthesis and accumulation of photosynthetic products.
388
function of NADP-ME is to catalyze oxidative decarboxylation of malic acid to provide CO2 for the
389
photosynthetic carbon fixation of Rubisco enzyme. 26 Many studies have shown that salt stress results in
390
the expression of NADP-ME, which is resistant to salt damage. 28 In a previous study we showed that the
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
39
In sweet sorghum,
33
The main
Page 17 of 32
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
391
expression of the gene encoding NADP-ME is extremely enhanced by salt stress in the salt-tolerant
392
sweet sorghum line M-81E.
393
line M-81E, which encoded a protein of 637 amino acids (Figure S1A). Amino acid sequence analysis
394
revealed that the protein contained the conserved structural (Figure S1B) and functional domains and
395
showed the highest homology with NADP-ME proteins from Imperata cylindrica and Zea mays (Figure
396
1). Analysis of SbNADP-ME transcripts in the leaves of M-81E under different salt treatments showed
397
that the highest transcript level was attained under 150 mM NaCl treatment (Figure 2A). This finding
398
suggested that the transcription of SbNADP-ME in line M-81E may be induced by NaCl treatment. We
399
screened and identified Arabidopsis overexpression lines and salt-sensitive mutants (Figure S2A, B and
400
S3). nadp-me4 is a mutant of At1G79750 and nadp-me2 is a mutant of At5G11670. NADP-ME encoded
401
by At1G79750 is localized in the chloroplast, and is expressed throughout the plant as well as during
402
embryogenesis and germination. NADP-ME encoded by At5G11670 may be involved in malic acid
403
metabolism and may play a role in oxidization in the pentose phosphate pathway by cytoplasmic
404
enzymes. At present, most studies of these two genes have focused on plant development and
405
photosynthetic pathways, and little is known on their salt tolerance.
33
Therefore, in this study, we isolated the cDNA of SbNADP-ME from the
406
The germination of seeds is a prerequisite for the normal growth and development of plants in
407
saline-alkali soils and is also the most critical stage in a plant’s life. 37 In the present study, we observed
408
that the germination percentage, germination potential, and root length of the WT, Arabidopsis
409
overexpression lines, and the T-DNA mutants were inhibited under 50, 100, and 150 mM NaCl treatment
410
(Figure S4). The degree of inhibition in the WT was significantly higher than that of the overexpression
411
lines, but lower than that of the mutants (Figure 3). These results suggested that overexpression of
412
SbNADP-ME may increase plant salt tolerance to a certain extent at the seed germination stage.
413
The level of SbNADP-ME transcripts in the leaves of Arabidopsis overexpression lines was
414
enhanced with the increase in NaCl concentration and attained the highest level under 100 mM NaCl in
415
the seedling stage (Figure 2B). Furthermore, the photosynthetic physiological index, chlorophyll content,
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 18 of 32
416
fluorescence parameters, and seedling biomass of the WT and overexpression lines were also determined
417
under 100 mM NaCl treatment (Table 1). Under salt treatment, a plant regulates the stomata to ensure
418
high photosynthetic efficiency, which is an anti-stress mechanism of the plant.
419
enzyme in the C4 pathway, which catalyzes the photosynthetic efficiency of plants by catalyzing the
420
decarboxylation of malic acid to provide CO2 for the photosynthetic carbon fixation of Rubisco enzyme.
421
41
422
photosynthesis.
423
related to salt tolerance.
424
salt stress and the rice NADP-ME confers salt tolerance in transgenic Arabidopsis seedlings.
425
present experiment indicated that overexpression of SbNADP-ME in Arabidopsis enhanced salt tolerance
426
by increasing the photosynthetic efficiency. In addition, the photosynthetic efficiency of the nadp-me4
427
and nadp-me2 mutants was lower than that of the WT Arabidopsis. The higher photosynthetic efficiency
428
of overexpression lines (Table 1) alleviated PSII and PSII photoinhibition (Table 1) during salt stress. In
429
the current study, seed germination, seedling root length, photosynthetic parameters, chlorophyll content,
430
and PSI and PSII activity of the nadp-me4, nadp-me2, and nadp-me2 4 mutants decreased significantly
431
under salt stress compared with the WT and Arabidopsis overexpression lines, indicating that
432
At1G79750 and At5G11670 may be involved in salt tolerance. The decrease in these parameters was
433
most severe in the double mutant nadp-me2 4, which indicated a partial redundancy effect may be at
434
play between AtNADP-ME4 and AtNADP-ME2 in Arabidopsis.
435
40
NADP-ME is a key
Under drought stress, wheat showed increased activity of NADP-ME and reduced damage to 29
Salt induces the expression of NADP-ME in leaves of Aloe vera L., which is closely 42
NADP-ME gene expression and protein activity in rice were up-regulated by 30
The
During seedling development, photosynthesis is a critical factor in survival. 43,49 The photosynthetic 7,43
436
parameters of Pn, Ci, Tr and Gs reflect the plant photosynthetic capability.
437
environments stress by stomatal closure, which reduces CO2 availability in the chloroplasts,
438
progressively decreasing photosynthesis and photosynthetic capacity. In the present study, upon
439
exposure of Arabidopsis to salt stress, Pn, Ci, Tr and Gs declined (Table 1). Photosynthetic parameters
440
decreased to lesser degrees in the Arabidopsis overexpression lines and more severely in the mutants
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Plants respond to
Page 19 of 32
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
441
than those in the WT (Table 1). For more than 10 years researchers in laboratories around the world have
442
attempted to improve photosynthesis and crop yield by introducing a single-cell C4-cycle into C3 plants
443
using a transgenic approach.
444
the key enzymes of the C4 cycle in rice, potato, and tobacco. The overexpression of C4-cycle enzymes in
445
transgenic C3 plants has been shown to improve C3 photosynthesis. 31,44 The present results also showed
446
that the overexpression of the C4 sweet sorghum NADP-ME improved salt tolerance of the C3 plant
447
Arabidopsis by influencing photosynthesis.
44
In the meantime, there has been substantial progress in overexpressing
448
Chlorophyll is an important indicator of plant photosynthetic capacity, but also one of the main
449
physiological indicators of plant salt tolerance. Under salt stress conditions, the plant chlorophyll content
450
is usually reduced.
451
transfer in photosynthesis, regulating light absorption, transition, and distribution. 17 Chlorophyll content
452
can reflect the photosynthesis capability to some extent. Under exposure to salt stress, the Chl a and b
453
content declined in Arabidopsis. In addition, the Chl content decreased less in the Arabidopsis
454
overexpression lines and more strongly in the mutants than that of the WT (Table 1). Higher Chl content
455
can result in higher photochemical efficiency of PSII in NADP-ME overexpression lines (Table 1). This
456
finding revealed that light energy absorbed by the light-harvesting complex was higher in the
457
overexpression lines and lower in the mutants relative to that in the WT, which resulted in the different
458
degrees of PSII photoinhibition.
459
45
Chlorophyll a molecules are critical components for light-harvesting and electron
Changes in Fo depend on the dominant factor between energy dissipation and damage to PSII; 46
460
inactivation or damage to PSII causes the increase in Fo.
We showed that Fo increased in the WT,
461
overexpression lines, and the mutants (Table 1). However, Fo increased to a lesser extent in the
462
overexpression lines compared with that in the WT and the mutants. The photoinhibition of PSII is
463
closely associated with the redox state of QA to some extent under stress conditions. 47,50 The parameter
464
1−qp is usually used to estimate the relative redox state of QA in vivo. 48 The present results showed that
465
1−qp of the WT, overexpression lines, and the mutants increased under 100 mM NaCl, and the increase
466
was highest in the mutants (Table 1). This finding shows that the extent of reduction in QA in ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 20 of 32
467
overexpression lines was lower under salt stress. The increase in 1−qp was accompanied by an increase
468
in NPQ (Table 1), which increased to the greatest degree in the mutants. We observed that ΦPSII of
469
overexpression lines decreased to a lesser extent than that of the WT and the mutants (Table 1), which
470
suggested that the overexpression lines showed higher photosynthetic capacity. The PSI oxidoreductive
471
activity (ΔI/Io) also decreased in the WT, overexpression lines, and the mutants, but the decrease was
472
less severe in the overexpression lines relative to that in the WT and the mutants (Table 1). The
473
significant decline in ΔI/Io in the mutants might be attributable not only to the limitation of electron
474
acceptors but also probably to damage to the PSI components. These results suggest that the extent of
475
PSII and PSI photoinhibition is decreased by overexpression of SbNADP-ME, and as a result, the FM
476
and DM are higher (Table 1).
477
Plants may accumulate compatible osmolytes under environmental stress. Proline is an important
478
osmolyte during tolerance to abiotic stress because it can maintain redox balance and protect protein
479
structures. In the current study, proline content in the WT, transgenic plants, and mutant lines increased
480
under salt stress (Figure 4A). The increase was highest in transgenic plants. This finding indicated that
481
overexpression of SbNADP-ME may increase osmotic adjustment in Arabidopsis. The DPPH radical is a
482
stable nitrogen-based free radical. The present results showed that the scavenging abilities on DPPH
483
radicals of the WT, transgenic plants, and mutant lines decreased under salt stress (Figure 4B), but the
484
scavenging ability decreased the least in transgenic plants. This finding suggests that overexpression of
485
SbNADP-ME can increase scavenging activity on DPPH under salt stress. Environmental stress can lead
486
to accumulation of reactive oxygen species, which causes oxidative damage to cells and generation of
487
MDA as an end product of membrane peroxidation. In the present study, MDA content increased under
488
salt stress (Figure 5). The MDA content increased to the least degree in the transgenic plants. This
489
finding suggests that overexpression of SbNADP-ME may decrease the extent of membrane
490
peroxidation.
491
In this study, we also detected the expression of stress responsive genes (Figure 6). We found that
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 21 of 32
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
492
SOS1, responsible for ion efflux on plasma membrane, NHX1, responsible for ion influx on vacuole
493
membrane, were both up-regulated in the overexpressed lines and down-regulated in the mutant lines.
494
This suggests that overexpression of SbNADP-ME could help to keep less Na+. The expression of P5CS1,
495
GSTU5, SOD and APX were also promoted by overexpression of SbNADP-ME and inhibited by the
496
deletion of SbNADP-ME, which showed that SbNADP-ME might play a positive regulatory role in
497
peroxide stress and reduce ROS damage by overexpression in Arabidopsis. These results suggest that
498
SbNADP-ME might regulate osmotic stress and ionic stress related pathways by changing the expression
499
of some associated genes.
500
In conclusion, we demonstrated that the expression of NADP-ME in the sweet sorghum line M-81E
501
was activated by salt stress. Overexpression of SbNADP-ME increased the photosynthetic capacity in
502
Arabidopsis under salt stress. The increase in photosynthetic efficiency may protect the photosynthetic
503
apparatus and maintain membrane function under salt treatment. These findings provide information
504
valuable for bioengineering of plant fitness and present insight into the molecular mechanisms
505
underlying photosynthetic efficiency and salt tolerance.
506
Authors’ contributions
507
NS and YYG wrote this manuscript; YYG, YSS, HXZ and JRG performed experiments; YSS and YZ
508
collected data and carried out all analyses; NS conceptualized the idea and revised the manuscript.
509
Acknowledgements
510
We are grateful for financial support from Shandong Natural Science Foundation (ZR2016JL028), Major
511
Program of Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation (2017C03), the NSFC (National Natural
512
Science Research Foundation of China) (31300205).
513
Thanks professor Xinqi Gao of Shandong Agricultural University for helping us make double knock out
514
mutant of NADP-ME.
515
We thank Robert McKenzie, PhD, from Liwen Bianji, Edanz Group China (www.liwenbianji.cn/ac), for
516
editing the English text of a draft of this manuscript.
517 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
518
Page 22 of 32
References 1. Awika, J. M.; Rooney, L. W.; Wu, X. L.; Prior, R. L.; Cisneros-Zevallos, L. Screening Methods To Measure Antioxidant Activity of Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) and Sorghum Products J. Agric. Food Chem. 2003, 51 (23): 6657-6662 2. Guo, Y. Y.; Tian, S. S.; Liu, S. S., et al. Energy dissipation and antioxidant enzyme system protect photosystem II of sweet sorghum under drought stress Photosynthetica 2018, 56: 1-12 3. Paterson, A. H.; Bowers, J. E.; Bruggmann, R., et al. The Sorghum bicolor genome and the diversification of grasses Nature 2009, 457(7229): 551-556 4. Yang, Z.; Wang, Y.; Wei, X. C.; Zhao, X.; Wang, B. S.; Sui, N. Transcription Profiles of Genes Related to Hormonal Regulations under Salt Stress in Sweet Sorghum [J]. Plant Molecular Biology Reporter, 2017, 8: 1-14 5. Munns, R.; Tester, M. Mechanisms of salinity tolerance Annu. Rev. Plant Biol. 2008, 59: 651-681 6. Yuan, F.; Lyu, M. J. A.; Leng, B. Y., et al. Comparative transcriptome analysis of developmental stages of the Limonium bicolor leaf generates insights into salt gland differentiation Plant, cell & environment 2015, 38(8): 1637-1657 7. Chaves, M. M.; Flexas, J.; Pinheiro, C. Photosynthesis under drought and salt stress: regulation mechanisms from whole plant to cell Annals of botany 2009, 103(4): 551-560 8. Song, J.; Zhou, J.; Zhao, W., et al. Effects of salinity and nitrate on production and germination of dimorphic seeds applied both through the mother plant and exogenously during germination in Suaeda salsa Plant species biology 2016, 31(1): 19-28 9. Kerepesi I. Osmotic and Salt Stresses Induced Differential Alteration in Water-Soluble Carbohydrate Content in Wheat Seedlings J. Agric. Food Chem. 1998, 46 (12): 5347-5354 10. Liu, S.; Wang, W.; Li, M., et al. Antioxidants and unsaturated fatty acids are involved in salt tolerance in peanut Physiologiae Plantarum 2017, 39(9): 207
Acta
11. Sui, N.; Tian, S.; Wang, W., et al. Overexpression of Glycerol-3-Phosphate Acyltransferase from Suaeda salsa Improves Salt Tolerance in Arabidopsis Frontiers in plant science 2017, 8: 1-14 12. Flexas, J.; Bota, J.; Loreto, F., et al. Diffusive and metabolic limitations to photosynthesis under drought and salinity in C3 plants Plant Biology 2004, 6(03): 269-279 13. Flexas, J.; DIAZ-ESPEJO, A.; GalmES, J., et al. Rapid variations of mesophyll conductance in response to changes in CO2 concentration around leaves Plant, Cell & Environment 2007, 30(10): 1284-1298 14. Lawlor, D. W.; Cornic, G. Photosynthetic carbon assimilation and associated metabolism in relation to water deficits in higher plants Plant, Cell & Environment 2002, 25(2): 275-294 15. Baker, N. R. A possible role for photosystem II in environmental perturbations of photosynthesis Physiologia Plantarum 1991, 81(4): 563-570 16. Murata, N.; Takahashi, S.; Nishiyama, Y., et al. Photoinhibition of photosystem II under environmental stress Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA)-Bioenergetics 2007, 1767(6): 414-421 17. Sui, N.; Han, G. Salt-induced photoinhibition of PSII is alleviated in halophyte Thellungiella halophila by increases of unsaturated fatty acids in membrane lipids Acta physiologiae plantarum 2014, 36(4): 983-992 18. Nishiyama, Y.; Allakhverdiev, S. I.; Murata, N. A new paradigm for the action of reactive oxygen species in the photoinhibition of photosystem II Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA)-Bioenergetics 2006, 1757(7): 742-749 19. Shu, S.; Sun, J.; Guo, S., et al. Effects of Exogenous Putrescine on PSⅡ Photochemistry and Ion Distribution of Cucumber Seedlings under Salt Stress Acta Horticulturae Sinica 2010, 7: 007 20. Bologna, F. P.; Andreo, C. S.; Drincovich, M. F. Escherichia coli malic enzymes: two isoforms with substantial differences in kinetic properties, metabolic regulation, and structure Journal of bacteriology 2007, 189(16): 5937-5946 21. Fukuda, W.; Sari Ismail, Y.; Fukui, T., et al. Characterization of an archaeal malic enzyme from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus kodakaraensis KOD1 Archaea 2005, 1(5): 293-301 22. Majeran, W.; van Wijk, K. J. Cell-type-specific differentiation of chloroplasts in C4 plants Trends in plant science 2009, 14(2): 100-109 23. Drincovich, M. F.; Casati, P.; Andreo, C. S. NADP-malic enzyme from plants: a ubiquitous enzyme involved in different metabolic pathways Febs Letters 2001, 490(1-2): 1-6
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 23 of 32
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
24. Rothermel, B. A.; Nelson, T. Primary structure of the maize NADP-dependent malic enzyme Journal of Biological Chemistry 1989, 264(33): 19587-19592 25. Maurino, V. G.; Drincovich, M. F.; Casati, P., et al. NADP-malic enzyme: immunolocalization in different tissues 34 plant maize and the C3 plant wheat Journal of Experimental Botany 1997, 48(3): 799-811 26. Drincovich, M. F.; Lara, M. V.; Andreo, C. S., et al. C4 decarboxylases: different solutions for the same biochemical problem, the provision of CO 2 to Rubisco in the bundle sheath cells C4 Photosynthesis and Related CO2 Concentrating Mechanisms. Springer Netherlands 2010, 277-300 27. Laporte, M. M.; Shen, B.; Tarczynski, M. C. Engineering for drought avoidance: expression of maize NADP-malic enzyme in tobacco results in altered stomatal function Journal of Experimental Botany 2002, 53(369): 699-705 28. Fu, Z. Y.; Zhang, Z. B.; Hu, X. J., et al. Cloning, identification, expression analysis and phylogenetic relevance of two NADP-dependent malic enzyme genes from hexaploid wheat Comptes Rendus Biologies 2009, 332(7): 591-602 29. Hýsková, V. D.; Miedzińska, L.; Dobra, J.; Vankova, R.; Ryšlavá, H. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, NADP-malic enzyme, and pyruvate, phosphate dikinase are involved in the acclimation of Nicotiana tabacum L. to drought stress Journal of plant physiology 2014, 171(5): 19-25 30. Cheng, Y.; Long, M. A cytosolic NADP-malic enzyme gene from rice (Oryza sativa L.) confers salt tolerance in transgenic Arabidopsis Biotechnology Letters 2007, 29(7): 1129-1134 31. Badia, M. B.; Arias, C. L.; Tronconi, M. A., et al. Enhanced cytosolic NADP-ME2 activity in A. thaliana affects plant development, stress tolerance and specific diurnal and nocturnal cellular processes Plant Science 2015, 240: 193-203 32. Chen, L.; Tsugama, D.; Takano, T., et al. Rice (Oryza sativa L.) OsNADP-ME4 gene responds to adversity stresses Cell Biology and Biophysics 2015, 4: 1-7 33. Sui, N.; Yang, Z.; Liu, M., et al. Identification and transcriptomic profiling of genes involved in increasing sugar content during salt stress in sweet sorghum leaves BMC genomics 2015, 16(1): 534 34. Kooten, O.; Snel, J. F. The use of chlorophyll fluorescence nomenclature in plant stress physiology Photosynth Res 1990, 25:147-150 35. Schreiber, U.; Bilger, W.; Neubauer, C. Chlorophyll fluorescence as a nonintrusive indicator for rapid assessment of in vivo photosynthesis Ecophysiol. Photosynth. 1994, 100: 49-70 36. Schansker, G.; Srivastava, A.; Strasser, R. J. Characterization of the 820-nm transmission signal paralleling the chlorophyll a fluorescence rise (OJIP) in pea leaves Funct. Plant Biol. 2003, 7: 785-796 37. Misra, N.; Dwivedi, U. N. Genotypic difference in salinity tolerance of green gram cultivars Plant Science 2004, 166(5): 1135-1142 38. Almodares, A.; Hadi, M. R. Production of bioethanol from sweet sorghum: A review African Journal of Agricultural Research 2009, 4(9): 772-780 39. Vasilakoglou, I.; Dhima, K.; Karagiannidis, N.; Gatsis, T. Sweet sorghum productivity for biofuels under increased soil salinity and reduced irrigation Field Crop Res 2011, 120(1): 38-46 40. Gill, S. S.; Tuteja, N. Polyamines and abiotic stress tolerance in plants Plant signaling & behavior 2010, 5(1): 26-33 41. Edwards, G. E.; Huber, S. C. The C4 pathway The biochemistry of plants: a comprehensive treatise 2014, 8: 237-281 42. Sun, S. B.; Shen, Q. R.; Wan, J. M., et al. Induced expression of the gene for NADP-malic enzyme in leaves of Aloe vera L. under salt stress Acta Biochimica et Biochimica et Biophysica Sinaca-Chinese Edition 2003, 35(5): 423-429 43. Chaves, M. M.; Pereira, J. S.; Maroco, J., et al. How plants cope with water stress in the field? Photosynthesis and growth Annals of botany 2002, 89(7): 907-916 44. Häusler, R. E.; Hirsch, H. J.; Kreuzaler, F., et al. Overexpression of C4‐cycle enzymes in transgenic C3 plants: a biotechnological approach to improve C3‐photosynthesis Journal of Experimental Botany 2002, 53(369): 591-607 45. Fall, D.; Diouf, D.; Neyra, M., et al. Physiological and biochemical responses of acacia seyal (Del.) seedlings under salt stress conditions Journal of Plant Nutrition 2009, 32(7): 1122-1136 46. Chen, H. X.; Li, W. J.; An, S. Z., et al. Characterization of PSII photochemistry and thermostability in salt-treated Rumex leaves Journal of plant physiology 2004, 161(3): 257-264 47. Xu, C. C.; Jeon, Y. A.; Lee, C. H. Relative contributions of photochemical and non‐photochemical routes to excitation energy dissipation in rice and barley illuminated at a chilling temperature Physiologia Plantarum 1999, 107(4): 447-453
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 24 of 32
48. Sui, N. Photoinhibition of Suaeda salsa to chilling stress under low irradiance is related to energy dissipation and water-water cycle Photosynthetica 2015, 53(2): 207-212 49. Lee, H. J.; Choi, J.; Lee, S. M., et al. Photosynthetic CO2 conversion to fatty acid ethyl esters (FAEEs) using engineered cyanobacteria Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2017, 65(6): 1087-1092 50. Nain-Perez, A.; Barbosa, L. C.; Maltha, C. R., et al. Tailoring Natural Abenquines To Inhibit the Photosynthetic Electron Transport through Interaction with the D1 Protein in Photosystem II Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2017, 65(51): 11304-11311
519
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 25 of 32
520
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Legends to figures Figure 1 Phylogenetic relationships of amino acid residue sequences of the conserved cyclin box domains of sweet sorghum SbNADP-ME and NADP-ME genes from Oryza brachyantha (Locus ID: 102719626),
Oryza
sativa
(acc.
no.
AB053295),
Brachypodium
distachyum
(acc.
no.BRADI_2g33450), Triticum aestivum (acc. no. AK455007.1), Imperata cylindrica (acc. no. FN397879.1), Zea mays (acc. no. GRMZM2G085019), Paspalum paniculatum (acc. no. AJ318587), Setaria viridis (acc. no. FN397881.1), Arabidopsis thaliana (acc. no. At1G79750), Cyrtococcum patens (acc. no. FN397866.1), Echinochloa crusgalli (acc. no. FJ603315.1). Figure 2 Relative transcript levels of SbNADP-ME in sweet sorghum (A) and in transgenic Arabidopsis (B) measured by qPCR. Total RNA was isolated from leaves of seedlings in culture. The expression levels were normalized to sweet sorghum actin. Sweet sorghum seedlings were treated with 0, 50, 100, 150, or 200 mM NaCl. The relative transcript levels of NADP-ME in the Arabidopsis overexpression lines T10 and T24 were determined at 0, 50, and 100 mM NaCl treatment. Values are means ± SD of five measurements for each of five plants (n = 5). Bars with different lower-case letters indicate a significant difference at the P ≤ 0.05 significance level. Figure 3 The phenotype of wild type (WT), transgenic overexpression plants, and T-DNA mutant lines of Arabidopsis treated with 0, 100, and 150 mM NaCl for 7 d (A, B, C). Effect of different levels of NaCl stress on germination percentage (D) and root length (E) of WT, transgenic overexpression plants, and T-DNA mutant lines of Arabidopsis after 7 d. Values are means ± SD of five measurements for each of five plants (n = 5). Bars with different lower-case letters indicate a significant difference at the P ≤ 0.05 significance level. Figure 4 Proline content (A) and scavenging ability (B) of wild type (WT), transgenic overexpression plants, and T-DNA mutant lines of Arabidopsis treated with 0 and 100 mM NaCl for 7 d. Values are means ± SD of five measurements for each of five plants (n = 5). Bars with different lower-case letters indicate a significant difference at the P ≤ 0.05 significance level.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 26 of 32
Figure 5 Malondialdehyde (MDA) content of wild type (WT), transgenic overexpression plants, and T-DNA mutant lines of Arabidopsis treated with 0 and 100 mM NaCl for 7 d. Values are means ± SD of five measurements for each of five plants (n = 5). Bars with different lower-case letters indicate a significant difference at the P ≤ 0.05 significance level. Figure 6 Relative transcript levels of salt-responsive marker genes and function genes in wild type (WT), transgenic overexpression plants, and T-DNA mutant lines of Arabidopsis under salt stress. Relative transcript levels of the genes were determined by qPCR in Arabidopsis seedlings treated with 100 mM NaCl for 48 h. Data are represented as the mean of three measurements ±SD. Supporting Information Available: Figure S1 Structural domain prediction of sweet sorghum SbNADP-ME protein (A); sequence analysis of sweet sorghum SbNADP-ME amino acid sequences (B). Figure S2 Identification of Arabidopsis overexpression lines. Total RNA was isolated from leaves of Arabidopsis seedlings in culture. Basta screening in overexpressing lines of Arabidopsis (A); genomic DNA PCR of overexpression lines (B). Figure S3 Identification of Arabidopsis T-DNA insertion mutant lines. The T-DNA insertion was confirmed using PCR with the indicated primer sets. M represents a 2000 bp marker. A, nadp-me4; B, nadp-me2; C, nadp-me4-1; D, nadp-me2-1; E, nadp-me1; F, nadp-me3. Figure S4 Effect of different NaCl stress on germination percentage, germination potential, and root length of wild type (WT) and T-DNA mutant lines of Arabidopsis. A, Germination percentage after 1 day; B, germination potential after 3 days; C, germination percentage after 7 days; D, root length after 7 days. Values are means ± SD of five measurements for each of five plants (n = 5). Bars with different lower-case letters indicate a significant difference at the P ≤ 0.05 significance level.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 27 of 32
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 1
Figure 2
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 3
Figure 4
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 28 of 32
Page 29 of 32
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 5
Figure 6
14 WT T10 T24 nadp-me4 nadp-me2 nadp-me2 4
Relative expression level
12 10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 -4 -6 KIN1
RD29B
RD22
P5CS1
GSTU5
SOS1
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
NHX1
SOD
APX
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 30 of 32
Table 1 Effect of NaCl stress on the Pn, Ci, Tr, Gs, chlorophyll a, b contents, Fo, 1-qp, NPQ, ΦPSII, Fv/Fm, ΔI/Io, fresh mass and dry mass of WT, transgenic Arabidopsis plants and T-DNA mutant Arabidopsis lines for 7 days. Parameters 0 mM
WT 100 mM
0 mM
T10 100 mM
0 mM
T24 100 mM
Pn (μmol m-2 s-1)
2.9±0.17a
1.6±0.14c
3.0±0.12a
2.4±0.09b
3.0±0.12a
Ci (μmol mol-1)
559±8.33a
471±14.42c
576±10.41
516±15.28
a
b
nadp-me4
nadp-me2 100 mM
nadp-me2 4 0 mM 100 mM
0 mM
100 mM
0 mM
2.3±0.09b
3.0±0.21a
1.4±0.15d
2.9±0.16a
1.3±0.06d
3.0±0.24a
1.1±0.09e
570±8.19a
513±14.00b
553±3.46a
438±7.37d
549±6.43a
432±16.86d
562±5.41a
412±8.84e
Tr (mmol m-2 s-1)
1.2±0.02a
0.6±0.05d
1.3±0.04a
0.9±0.04b
1.2±0.03a
0.9±0.06bc
1.2±0.04a
0.5±0.04e
1.2±0.03a
0.5±0.05e
1.2±0.07a
0.4±0.05f
Gs (mmol m-2 s-1)
117±4.54a
71±1.73c
122±2.73a
92±2.65b
120±2.70a
86±3.00b
113±4.53a
57±3.06d
112±5.37a
56±4.62d
118±4.16a
44±3.18e
Chl a content (mg L-1 FW)
4.1±0.12a
3.2±0.23c
4.3±0.16a
3.6±0.15b
4.2±0.12a
3.6±0.12b
4.1±0.18a
3.0±0.15d
4.0±0.14a
2.9±0.23d
4.1±0.17a
2.7±0.18e
Chl b content (mg L-1 FW)
2.2±0.12a
1.9±0.11b
2.3±0.12a
2.1±0.11ab
2.2±0.13a
2.0±0.14ab
2.1±0.16a
1.7±0.17c
2.1±0.14a
1.8±0.13c
2.1±0.08a
1.6±0.15d
Fo
112±4.93f
138±4.04d
114±3.88f
121±3.45e
113±3.22f
126±3.44e
110±5.69f
190±6.25b
111±5.29f
175±6.56c
115±4.21f
209±7.19a
1-qp
0.31±0.00 5f 0.25±0.00 4f 0.53±0.00 5a 0.81±0.01 3a 8.3e-3±1. 33e-4a 0.94±0.02 7a 0.071±5.1 7e-3a
0.42±0.012c
0.31±0.01 1f 0.25±0.00 8f 0.54±0.01 0a 0.83±0.02 1a 8.3e-3±1. 40e-4a 0.96±0.05 3a 0.074±2.2 5e-3a
0.35±0.01 4e 0.33±0.00 8e 0.51±0.01 3b 0.81±0.00 7a 7.5e-3±4. 23e-4b 0.77±0.03 2b 0.055±4.0 0e-3c
0.32±0.01 3f 0.26±0.00 3f 0.54±0.01 4a 0.82±0.02 0a 8.3e-3±1. 79e-4a 0.97±0.03 8a 0.073±2.5 2e-3a
0.38±0.009d
0.31±0.012f
0.31±0.011f
0.42±0.010c
0.25±0.005f
0.25±0.004f
0.50±0.007b
0.51±0.014b
0.52±0.008a
0.52±0.015a
0.37±0.011d
0.79±0.011a
0.81±0.015a
0.81±0.017a
0.70±0.015c
8.1e-3±2.85 e-4a 0.91±0.010a
5.0e-3±2.99 e-4e 0.49±0.044d
0.34±0.01 8d 0.25±0.00 2f 0.52±0.01 0a 0.81±0.01 2a 8.2e-3±2. 43e-4a 0.93±0.01 9a 0.071±2.8 9e-3a
0.51±0.018a
0.37±0.010d
0.44±0.00 6b 0.51±0.00 9b 0.37±0.01 2d 0.70±0.00 7c 4.8e-3±1. 74e-4e 0.45±0.05 5d 0.033±2.5 2e-3e
NPQ Ф PSII Fv/Fm ΔI/Io Fresh mass (g) Dry mass (g)
0.41±0.014c 0.45±0.017c 0.76±0.025b 6.3e-3±1.49 e-4d 0.65±0.044c 0.044±3.12e -3d
b
7.2e-3±2.58 e-4bc 0.82±0.017b 0.064±4.58e -3b
8.2e-3±3.69 e-4a 0.89±0.027a 0.069±3.16e -3a
0.069±3.51e -3a
0.036±4.16e -3e
Values are means ±SD of five measurements for each of five plants (n = 5). Different lowercase letters show significant differences at the P≤0.05 level.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
0.53±0.011a 0.34±0.017e 0.62±0.013d 4.2e-3±2.73 e-4f 0.43±0.026d e
0.030±1.77e -3ef
Page 31 of 32
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
TOC Graphic
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
82x44mm (300 x 300 DPI)
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 32 of 32