4.7 Article

The effects of tea plants-soybean intercropping on the secondary metabolites of tea plants by metabolomics analysis

Journal

BMC PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12870-021-03258-1

Keywords

Tea plants-soybean intercropped; Secondary metabolites; Amino acids metabolites; Metabolic pathway

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31972460, 31870680]
  2. earmarked fund for China Agriculture Research System [CARS-19]
  3. Key Research and Development Program of Jiangsu Province [BE2019379]
  4. Jiangsu Agriculture Science and Technology Innovation Fund [CX(20)2004]
  5. Innovation and Extension Projects of Forestry Science and Technology in Jiangsu Province [LYKJ-Changzhou[2020]03]
  6. Changzhou Science and Technology Support Program [CE20202003]
  7. Significant Application Projects of Agriculture Technology Innovation in Shandong Province [SD2019ZZ010]
  8. Livelihood Project of Qingdao City [19-6-1-64-nsh]
  9. Chuzhou Science and Technology Support Program [2020ZN009]

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The study found that there were significant changes in the metabolic of secondary metabolites in tea plants when intercropped with soybean, especially during the profuse flowering stage of soybean. Through the intercropping system, tea plants showed higher chlorophyll photosynthetic parameters and photosynthetic activity. These results provide a basis for reducing the application of nitrogen fertilizer and improving the ecosystem in tea plantations.
Background Intercropping, especially with legumes, as a productive and sustainable system, can promote plants growth and improves the soil quality than the sole crop, is an essential cultivation pattern in modern agricultural systems. However, the metabolic changes of secondary metabolites and the growth in tea plants during the processing of intercropping with soybean have not been fully analyzed. Results The secondary metabolomic of the tea plants were significant influence with intercropping soybean during the different growth stages. Especially in the profuse flowering stage of intercropping soybean, the biosynthesis of amino acids was significantly impacted, and the flavonoid biosynthesis, the flavone and flavonol biosynthesis also were changed. And the expression of metabolites associated with amino acids metabolism, particularly glutamate, glutamine, lysine and arginine were up-regulated, while the expression of the sucrose and D-Glucose-6P were down-regulated. Furthermore, the chlorophyll photosynthetic parameters and the photosynthetic activity of tea plants were higher in the tea plants-soybean intercropping system. Conclusions These results strengthen our understanding of the metabolic mechanisms in tea plant's secondary metabolites under the tea plants-soybean intercropping system and demonstrate that the intercropping system of leguminous crops is greatly potential to improve tea quality. These may provide the basis for reducing the application of nitrogen fertilizer and improve the ecosystem in tea plantations.

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