4.7 Article

Time-dependent behavior of phenylpropanoid pathway in response to methyl jasmonate in Scrophularia striata cell cultures

Journal

PLANT CELL REPORTS
Volume 39, Issue 2, Pages 227-243

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00299-019-02486-y

Keywords

Energy cost; Metabolic response; Methyl jasmonate; Phenylpropanoid; Scrophularia striata

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Funding

  1. Tarbiat Modares University

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Key messageMeJA triggers a time-dependent behavior of the phenylpropanoid compounds.AbstractPlant cells produce a large number of metabolites in response to environmental factors. The cellular responses to environmental changes are orchestrated by signaling molecules, such as methyl jasmonate (MeJA). To understand how the MeJA changes the behavior of amino acids, carbohydrates, and phenylpropanoid compounds such as phenolic acids, phenylethanoid-glycosides, and flavonoids in Scrophularia striata cells; we monitored the metabolic responses for different times of exposure. In this study, we performed a time course analysis of metabolites and enzymes in S. striata cells exposed to MeJA (100 mu M) and evaluated the metabolic flux towards carbon-rich secondary metabolites production. Moreover, we calculated the biosynthetic energy cost for free amino acids. Our results indicated that MeJA accelerates the sucrose degradation and directs the metabolic fluxes towards a pool of flavonoids and phenylethanoid glycosides through a change in enzyme behavior in the entry point and center of the phenylpropanoid pathway. MeJA also decreased and then raised the amino acid biosynthesis cost in S. striata cells in a time-dependent manner, indicating the cells evolve to utilize amino acids more economically by reducing cell growth. Finally, we classified the marked changes in the metabolites level and enzyme activities into three groups including early-, late-, and oscillatory-response groups to MeJA and summarized our findings as a model depicting pathway interactions during MeJA elicitation. Determination of metabolic levels in response to MeJA suggests that the changes in metabolic responses are time-dependent.

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