Abstract

In the context of climatic change, more heavy precipitation and more frequent flooding and waterlogging events threaten the productivity of arable farmland. Furthermore, crops were not selected to cope with flooding- and waterlogging-induced oxygen limitation. In general, low oxygen stress, unlike other abiotic stresses (e.g., cold, high temperature, drought and saline stress), received little interest from the scientific community and less financial support from stakeholders. Accordingly, breeding programs should be developed and agronomical practices should be adapted in order to save plants’ growth and yield—even under conditions of low oxygen availability (e.g., submergence and waterlogging). The prerequisite to the success of such breeding programs and changes in agronomical practices is a good knowledge of how plants adapt to low oxygen stress at the cellular and the whole plant level. In the present paper, we summarized the recent knowledge on metabolic adjustment in general under low oxygen stress and highlighted thereafter the major changes pertaining to the reconfiguration of amino acids syntheses. We propose a model showing (i) how pyruvate derived from active glycolysis upon hypoxia is competitively used by the alanine aminotransferase/glutamate synthase cycle, leading to alanine accumulation and NAD+ regeneration. Carbon is then saved in a nitrogen store instead of being lost through ethanol fermentative pathway. (ii) During the post-hypoxia recovery period, the alanine aminotransferase/glutamate dehydrogenase cycle mobilizes this carbon from alanine store. Pyruvate produced by the reverse reaction of alanine aminotransferase is funneled to the TCA cycle, while deaminating glutamate dehydrogenase regenerates, reducing equivalent (NADH) and 2-oxoglutarate to maintain the cycle function.

Highlights

  • The absence of a tissue or a system dedicated to oxygen uptake and delivery to the organs in plants may create localized hypoxic environments when oxygen diffusion is hindered by the anatomy and the structure of the tissue—e.g., dense cell packing

  • Pyruvate as a byproduct of glycolysis is competitively used through an alanine aminotransferase (AlaAT)/NADH-Glutamine Oxoglutarate amino transferase (GOGAT) cycle, leading to the storage of carbon in alanine

  • Alanine is synthesized by AlaAT using glutamate as an amino donor, while

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Summary

Introduction

The absence of a tissue or a system dedicated to oxygen uptake and delivery to the organs in plants may create localized hypoxic environments when oxygen diffusion is hindered by the anatomy and the structure of the tissue—e.g., dense cell packing. It has been shown that if overexpression of the native RAP2.12 improves survival under low oxygen stress, the constitutive accumulation of versions of RAP2.12 insensitive to NERP proteolysis decreased survival, indicating that a fine-tuning of transcription is a prerequisite for cellular homeostasis under hypoxia It has been recently demonstrated in Arabidopsis that RAP2.12 is negatively regulated through a protein–protein interaction with a hypoxia-inducible transcription factor that encodes a trihelix. Hypoxia/anoxia-sensitive seeds of wheat and barley do not induce amylases under hypoxic/anoxic conditions of germination, in contrast to anaerobic germination-competent rice seeds [24] Another specificity of the plants is the reconfiguration of nitrogen metabolism, in particular amino acids metabolism via alanine fermentative pathway [15,25,26]

Alanine Aminotransferase Safeguard Carbon in a Nitrogen Store upon Hypoxia
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