4.7 Article

Tocopherol-deficient rice plants display increased sensitivity to photooxidative stress

Journal

PLANTA
Volume 239, Issue 6, Pages 1351-1362

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00425-014-2064-8

Keywords

High light; Photooxidative stress; Rice (Oryza sativa); RNAi; Tocopherol (function)

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31070273]
  2. Tianjin Science and Technology Support Program [11ZCGYNC01000]
  3. 111 Project [B08011]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Tocopherol-deficient transgenic plants were generated by silencing HPT and TC. They exhibited distinct phenotype and physiological parameters under high light condition, indicating that tocopherol is indispensable in photoprotection in rice. Tocopherols are lipophilic antioxidants that are synthesized exclusively in photosynthetic organisms. Despite extensive in vivo characterization of tocopherol functions in plants, their functions in the monocot model plant, rice, remain to be determined. In this study, transgenic rice plants constitutively silenced for homogentisate phytyltransferase (HPT) and tocopherol cyclase (TC) activity were generated. Silencing of HPT and TC resulted in up to a 98 % reduction in foliar tocopherol content relative to the control plants, which was also confirmed by transcript level analysis. When grown under normal conditions, HPT and TC transgenics showed no distinctive phenotype relative to the control plants, except a slight reduction in plant height and a slight decrease in the first leaf length. However, when exposed to high light at low temperatures, HPT and TC transgenics had a significantly higher leaf yellowing index than the control plants. The tocopherol-deficient plants decreased their total individual chlorophyll levels, their chlorophyll a/b ratio, and the maximum photochemical efficiency of photosystem II, whereas increased lipid peroxidation levels relative to the control plants. Tocopherol deficiency had no effect on ascorbate biosynthesis, but induced glutathione, antheraxanthin, and particularly zeaxanthin biosynthesis for compensation under stressful conditions. However, despite these compensation mechanisms, HPT and TC transgenics still exhibited altered phenotypes under high light at low temperatures. Therefore, it is suggested that tocopherols cannot be replaced and play an indispensable role in photoprotection in rice.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available