4.7 Article

New Insight into Aspartate Metabolic Pathways in Populus: Linking the Root Responsive Isoenzymes with Amino Acid Biosynthesis during Incompatible Interactions of Fusarium solani

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23126368

Keywords

Populus; nitrogen metabolism; aspartate pathway; amino acids; defense response

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [31870589, 31700525]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province (NSFJ) [BK20170921]
  3. Graduate Research Innovation Projects in Jiangsu Province [SJCX22_0329]

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Integrating amino acid metabolic pathways into plant defense and immune systems plays a fundamental role in stress acclimation and host-pathogen interactions. This study investigates the isoenzyme families involved in aspartate metabolic pathways in Populus trichocarpa, revealing their importance in plant growth and defense regulation. The research also demonstrates the significant induction of specific isoenzyme genes in response to pathogen infection, leading to perturbations in Asp-related metabolites. The integration of multi-omics data sheds light on the role of Asp as a mediator in metabolite biosynthesis and defense regulation.
Integrating amino acid metabolic pathways into plant defense and immune systems provides the building block for stress acclimation and host-pathogen interactions. Recent progress in L-aspartate (Asp) and its deployed metabolic pathways highlighted profound roles in plant growth and defense modulation. Nevertheless, much remains unknown concerning the multiple isoenzyme families involved in Asp metabolic pathways in Populus trichocarpa, a model tree species. Here, we present comprehensive features of 11 critical isoenzyme families, representing biological significance in plant development and stress adaptation. The in silico prediction of the molecular and genetic patterns, including phylogenies, genomic structures, and chromosomal distribution, identify 44 putative isoenzymes in the Populus genome. Inspection of the tissue-specific expression demonstrated that approximately 26 isogenes were expressed, predominantly in roots. Based on the transcriptomic atlas in time-course experiments, the dynamic changes of the genes transcript were explored in Populus roots challenged with soil-borne pathogenic Fusarium solani (Fs). Quantitative expression evaluation prompted 12 isoenzyme genes (PtGS2/6, PtGOGAT2/3, PtAspAT2/5/10, PtAS2, PtAspg2, PtAlaAT1, PtAK1, and PtAlaAT4) to show significant induction responding to the Fs infection. Using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and non-target metabolomics assay, the concurrent perturbation on levels of Asp-related metabolites led to findings of free amino acids and derivatives (e.g., Glutamate, Asp, Asparagine, Alanine, Proline, and alpha-/gamma-aminobutyric acid), showing marked differences. The multi-omics integration of the responsive isoenzymes and differential amino acids examined facilitates Asp as a cross-talk mediator involved in metabolite biosynthesis and defense regulation. Our research provides theoretical clues for the in-depth unveiling of the defense mechanisms underlying the synergistic effect of fine-tuned Asp pathway enzymes and the linked metabolite flux in Populus.

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