Abstract

Dynamically changing environmental conditions promote a complex regulation of plant metabolism and balanced resource investments to development and defense. Plants of the Brassicales order constitutively allocate carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur to synthesize glucosinolates as their primary defense metabolites. Previous findings support a model in which steady-state levels of glucosinolates in intact tissues are determined by biosynthesis and turnover through a yet uncharacterized turnover pathway. To investigate glucosinolate turnover in the absence of tissue damage, we quantified exogenously applied allyl glucosinolate and endogenous glucosinolates under different nutrient conditions. Our data shows that, in seedlings of Arabidopsis thaliana accession Columbia-0, glucosinolate biosynthesis and turnover are coordinated according to nutrient availability. Whereas exogenous carbon sources had general quantitative effects on glucosinolate accumulation, sulfur or nitrogen limitation resulted in distinct changes in glucosinolate profiles, indicating that these macronutrients provide different regulatory inputs. Raphanusamic acid, a breakdown product that can potentially be formed from all glucosinolate structures appears not to reflect in planta turnover rates, but instead correlates with increased accumulation of endogenous glucosinolates. Thus, raphanusamic acid could represent a metabolic checkpoint that allows glucosinolate-producing plants to measure the flux through the biosynthetic and/or turnover pathways and thereby to dynamically adjust glucosinolate accumulation in response to internal and external signals.

Highlights

  • Plants rely on a multitude of constitutive and inducible specialized metabolites that mediate interactions with the environment

  • Glucosinolate Biosynthesis and Turnover Are Coordinated According to Nutrient Availability

  • Steady-state levels of metabolites are determined by the rates of biosynthesis and turnover

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Plants rely on a multitude of constitutive and inducible specialized metabolites that mediate interactions with the environment. More and more studies uncovering additional roles of glucosinolates and glucosinolate-derived metabolites in feedback regulation of plant metabolism, growth and defense emerged (Zhao et al, 2008; Kerwin et al, 2011; Burow et al, 2015; Jensen et al, 2015; Katz et al, 2015; Francisco et al, 2016a; Malinovsky et al, 2017; Urbancsok et al, 2017; Urbancsok et al, 2018) These studies have connected primary and specialized metabolism via glucosinolate-mediated signaling networks, and provided first insights into the regulatory interplay between glucosinolate metabolism and plant development

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call