Abstract

Plants are often challenged by an array of unfavorable environmental conditions. During cold exposure, many changes occur that include, for example, the stabilization of cell membranes, alterations in gene expression and enzyme activities, as well as the accumulation of metabolites. In the presented study, the carbohydrate metabolism was analyzed in the very early response of plants to a low temperature (2 °C) in the leaves of 5-week-old potato plants of the Russet Burbank cultivar during the first 12 h of cold treatment (2 h dark and 10 h light). First, some plant stress indicators were examined and it was shown that short-term cold exposure did not significantly affect the relative water content and chlorophyll content (only after 12 h), but caused an increase in malondialdehyde concentration and a decrease in the expression of NDA1, a homolog of the NADH dehydrogenase gene. In addition, it was shown that the content of transitory starch increased transiently in the very early phase of the plant response (3–6 h) to cold treatment, and then its decrease was observed after 12 h. In contrast, soluble sugars such as glucose and fructose were significantly increased only at the end of the light period, where a decrease in sucrose content was observed. The availability of the monosaccharides at constitutively high levels, regardless of the temperature, may delay the response to cold, involving amylolytic starch degradation in chloroplasts. The decrease in starch content, observed in leaves after 12 h of cold exposure, was preceded by a dramatic increase in the transcript levels of the key enzymes of starch degradation initiation, the α-glucan, water dikinase (GWD-EC 2.7.9.4) and the phosphoglucan, water dikinase (PWD-EC 2.7.9.5). The gene expression of both dikinases peaked at 9 h of cold exposure, as analyzed by real-time PCR. Moreover, enhanced activities of the acid invertase as well as of both glucan phosphorylases during exposure to a chilling temperature were observed. However, it was also noticed that during the light phase, there was a general increase in glucan phosphorylase activities for both control and cold-stressed plants irrespective of the temperature. In conclusion, a short-term cold treatment alters the carbohydrate metabolism in the leaves of potato, which leads to an increase in the content of soluble sugars.

Highlights

  • Crop plants exposed to cold evolve an array of metabolic changes that allow them to tolerate stress conditions

  • Our experiment was designed so that the treatment started two hours before the light phase to decouple the light and temperature parameters from each other (Figure 1). This was done to enable metabolic changes related to cold treatment to be separated from the effects of light alterations

  • We demonstrated that short-term low temperature has a strong effect on the expression of starch-related

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Summary

Introduction

Crop plants exposed to cold evolve an array of metabolic changes that allow them to tolerate stress conditions. Exposure of plants to low, nonfreezing temperatures causes changes in physiological, biochemical, and molecular processes. Frost or winter survival is regarded as a complex trait with polygenic inheritance. These two main traits associated with frost or winter survival in wild diploid potato species have independent genetic control [2]. Primary cold tolerance is the ability of plants to survive under low-temperature conditions without prior acclimatization and is essential for effectively handling unexpected temperature drops [3]. Among the biochemical changes caused by exposure to cold, the accumulation of soluble sugars [4,5,6,7,8,9]

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