Abstract
In a transcriptomic screen of Manduca sexta-induced N-acyltransferases in leaves of Nicotiana attenuata, we identified an N-acyltransferase gene sharing a high similarity with the tobacco lignin-biosynthetic hydroxycinnamoyl-CoA:shikimate/quinate hydroxycinnamoyl transferase (HCT) gene whose expression is controlled by MYB8, a transcription factor that regulates the production of phenylpropanoid polyamine conjugates (phenolamides, PAs). To evaluate the involvement of this HCT-like gene in lignin production as well as the resulting crosstalk with PA metabolism during insect herbivory, we transiently silenced (by VIGs) the expression of this gene and performed non-targeted (UHPLC-ESI/TOF-MS) metabolomics analyses. In agreement with a conserved function of N. attenuata HCT-like in lignin biogenesis, HCT-silenced plants developed weak, soft stems with greatly reduced lignin contents. Metabolic profiling demonstrated large shifts (up to 12% deregulation in total extracted ions in insect-attacked leaves) due to a large diversion of activated coumaric acid units into the production of developmentally and herbivory-induced coumaroyl-containing PAs (N′,N′′-dicoumaroylspermidine, N′,N′′-coumaroylputrescine, etc) and to minor increases in the most abundant free phenolics (chlorogenic and cryptochlorogenic acids), all without altering the production of well characterized herbivory-responsive caffeoyl- and feruloyl-based putrescine and spermidine PAs. These data are consistent with a strong metabolic tension, exacerbated during herbivory, over the allocation of coumaroyl-CoA units among lignin and unusual coumaroyl-containing PAs, and rule out a role for HCT-LIKE in tuning the herbivory-induced accumulation of other PAs. Additionally, these results are consistent with a role for lignification as an induced anti-herbivore defense.
Highlights
Plants as sessile organisms are exposed during their development to variable stress conditions which have shaped, from a macro-evolutionary point of view, the emergence of highly adaptive tolerance and resistance traits
In an earlier study [9], we analyzed the expression patterns of these genes using a microarray system designed for N. attenuata and discovered that several of these genes shared temporal and tissuespecific and patterns of expression with that of MYB8, a phenolamide (PA)-specific transcription factor (TF)
To understand the influence of hydroxycinnamoyl transferase (HCT)-LIKE on PA and lignin biogenesis in N. attenuata, we transiently silenced the expression of this HCT-LIKE gene via virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS)
Summary
Plants as sessile organisms are exposed during their development to variable stress conditions which have shaped, from a macro-evolutionary point of view, the emergence of highly adaptive tolerance and resistance traits. Using microarray analysis and metabolic profiling of MYB8-silenced plants (irMYB8), we recently identified several N-acyltranferase enzymes that conjugate activated phenolic acids (p-coumaroyl-, caffeoyl-, feruloyl) with polyamines (putrescine and spermidine) [9]: AT1 is a hydroxycinnamoyl-CoA: putrescine acyltransferase responsible for caffeoyl- and coumaroyputrescine accumulation during insect herbivory. Another gene (DH29), specific for spermidine conjugation, mediates the initial acylation step in the formation of caffeoyl-, coumaroyl and feruloyl-containing di-acylated spermidine structures. This enzyme was not able to perform the second acylation towards diacylated spermidine biosynthesis, another acyltransferase gene, called CV86, proposed to act on mono-acylated spermidines was isolated and partially characterized [9]
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