Abstract

Alkali stress is an extreme complex stress type, which exerts negative effects on plants via chemical destruction, osmotic stress, ion injury, nutrient deficiency, and oxygen deficiency. Soil alkalization has produced severe problems in some area, while plant alkali tolerance is poorly understood. Sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) is an important oilseed crop with strong alkali tolerance. Here we exposed sunflower plants to alkali stress (NaHCO3/Na2CO3 = 9:1; pH 8.7) for whole life cycle. We applied transcriptomics, metabolomics, lipidomics and phytohormone analysis to elucidate the alkali tolerance mechanism of sunflower plant. Lipidomic analysis showed that alkali stress enhanced accumulation of saccharolipids and glycerolipids and lowered the accumulation of glycerophospholipids in sunflower seeds, indicating that alkali stress can change the lipid components of sunflower seeds, and that cultivating sunflower plants on alkalized farmlands will change the quality of sunflower seed oils. In addition, alkali stress downregulated expression of two rate-controlling genes of glycolysis in the leaves of sunflower but upregulated their expression in the roots. Enhanced glycolysis process provided more carbon sources and energy for alkali stress response of sunflower roots. Under alkali stress, accumulation of many fatty acids, amino acids, carbohydrates, and organic acids was greatly stimulated in sunflower roots. Alkali stress enhanced ACC, GA1, and ABA concentrations in the leaves but not in the roots, however, alkali stress elevated accumulation of BR (typhasterol) and CTK (Isopentenyladenosine) in the roots. We propose that multiple phytohormones and bioactive molecules interact to mediate alkali tolerance of sunflower.

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