4.7 Article

SWATH-MS based quantitive proteomics reveal regulatory metabolism and networks of androdioecy breeding system in Osmanthus fragrans

Journal

BMC PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12870-021-03243-8

Keywords

androdioecy; SWATH-MS; Proteomics; Pistil; Osmanthus fragrans

Categories

Funding

  1. Postgraduate Research & Practice Innovation Program of Jiangsu Province [KYCX19_1073]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [SBK2020042924, BK20200786]
  3. Major project of natural science research in colleges of Jiangsu Province [20KJA220001]
  4. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2016 M590462, 2019 M651839]
  5. Nanjing Forestry University [GXL2018005]
  6. Innovation Fund for Young Scholars of Nanjing Forestry University [CX2019029]
  7. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31300558, 32071782]
  8. Priority Academic Program Development (PAPD) of Jiangsu High Education Institutions, Jiangsu Province, China

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The study using proteomic approach revealed significant protein changes in pistils of male and hermaphroditic Osmanthus fragrans flowers, indicating the contributions of carbohydrate metabolism, secondary metabolism, and post-transcriptional regulation to the androdioecy breeding system. This sheds new light on the genetic basis and industrial development of Osmanthus fragrans.
Background The fragrant flower plant Osmanthus fragrans has an extremely rare androdioecious breeding system displaying the occurrence of males and hermaphrodites in a single population, which occupies a crucial intermediate stage in the evolutionary transition between hermaphroditism and dioecy. However, the molecular mechanism of androdioecy plant is very limited and still largely unknown. Results Here, we used SWATH-MS-based quantitative approach to study the proteome changes between male and hermaphroditic O. fragrans pistils. A total of 428 proteins of diverse functions were determined to show significant abundance changes including 210 up-regulated and 218 down-regulated proteins in male compared to hermaphroditic pistils. Functional categorization revealed that the differentially expressed proteins (DEPs) primarily distributed in the carbohydrate metabolism, secondary metabolism as well as signaling cascades. Further experimental analysis showed the substantial carbohydrates accumulation associated with promoted net photosynthetic rate and water use efficiency were observed in purplish red pedicel of hermaphroditic flower compared with green pedicel of male flower, implicating glucose metabolism serves as nutritional modulator for the differentiation of male and hermaphroditic flower. Meanwhile, the entire upregulation of secondary metabolism including flavonoids, isoprenoids and lignins seem to protect and maintain the male function in male flowers, well explaining important feature of androdioecy that aborted pistil of a male flower still has a male function. Furthermore, nine selected DEPs were validated via gene expression analysis, suggesting an extra layer of post-transcriptional regulation occurs during O. fragrans floral development. Conclusion Taken together, our findings represent the first SWATH-MS-based proteomic report in androdioecy plant O. fragrans, which reveal carbohydrate metabolism, secondary metabolism and post-transcriptional regulation contributing to the androdioecy breeding system and ultimately extend our understanding on genetic basis as well as the industrialization development of O. fragrans.

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