4.8 Article

Multi-omics analysis of xylem sap uncovers dynamic modulation of poplar defenses by ammonium and nitrate

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 111, Issue 1, Pages 282-303

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.15802

Keywords

carbohydrates; metabolomics; nitrogen; phytohormones; proteomics; salicinoids

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [IRTG 2172]
  2. Projekt DEAL
  3. Service Unit LCMS Protein Analytics of the Gottingen Center for Molecular Biosciences (GZMB) at the Georg-AugustUniversity Gottingen [DFG-GZ: INST 186/1230-1 FUGG]

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This study investigated how variations in nitrogen nutrition affected the metabolome and proteome of xylem sap, as well as the growth of the xylem endophyte Brennaria salicis and the transcriptional re-wiring of leaf defenses in poplar. The results showed that nitrogen nutrition had a significant impact on the composition of xylem sap, leading to changes in protein and metabolite abundances. These changes in xylem composition also affected the growth of the xylem endophyte and the transcriptional landscape of leaves, influencing plant defenses.
Xylem sap is the major transport route for nutrients from roots to shoots. In the present study, we investigated how variations in nitrogen (N) nutrition affected the metabolome and proteome of xylem sap and the growth of the xylem endophyte Brennaria salicis, and we also report transcriptional re-wiring of leaf defenses in poplar (Populus 3 canescens). We supplied poplars with high, intermediate or low concentrations of ammonium or nitrate. We identified 288 unique proteins in xylem sap. Approximately 85% of the xylem sap proteins were shared among ammonium- and nitrate-supplied plants. The number of proteins increased with increasing N supply but the major functional categories (catabolic processes, cell wallrelated enzymes, defense) were unaffected. Ammonium nutrition caused higher abundances of amino acids and carbohydrates, whereas nitrate caused higher malate levels in xylem sap. Pipecolic acid and N-hydroxypipecolic acid increased, whereas salicylic acid and jasmonoyl-isoleucine decreased, with increasing N nutrition. Untargeted metabolome analyses revealed 2179 features in xylem sap, of which 863 were differentially affected by N treatments. We identified 124 metabolites, mainly from specialized metabolism of the groups of salicinoids, phenylpropanoids, phenolics, flavonoids, and benzoates. Their abundances increased with decreasing N, except coumarins. Brennaria salicis growth was reduced in nutrient-supplemented xylem sap of low- and high- NO3- -fed plants compared to that of NH4+- fed plants. The drastic changes in xylem sap composition caused massive changes in the transcriptional landscape of leaves and recruited defenses related to systemic acquired and induced systemic resistance. Our study uncovers unexpected complexity and variability of xylem composition with consequences for plant defenses.

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