4.7 Article

Insights from a Multi-Omics Integration (MOI) Study in Oil Palm (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.) Response to Abiotic Stresses: Part One-Salinity

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11131755

Keywords

transcriptomics; proteomics; metabolomics; integratomics; abiotic stress; African oil palm

Categories

Funding

  1. Brazilian Innovation Agency-FINEP [01.13.0315.00]
  2. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel-CAPES

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Oil palm is the main source of vegetable oil, but the palm oil industry faces criticism for its unsustainable practices. Cultivating oil palm outside the rainforest zone requires artificial irrigation, and about 30% of irrigated agricultural lands worldwide also face salinity stress. Therefore, it is important for the research community to study drought and salinity together to develop superior genotypes for oil palm cultivation in new areas. Multi-Omics Integration provides an opportunity to unravel the mechanisms behind multigenic traits, such as drought and salinity tolerance.
Oil palm (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.) is the number one source of consumed vegetable oil nowadays. It is cultivated in areas of tropical rainforest, where it meets its natural condition of high rainfall throughout the year. The palm oil industry faces criticism due to a series of practices that was considered not environmentally sustainable, and it finds itself under pressure to adopt new and innovative procedures to reverse this negative public perception. Cultivating this oilseed crop outside the rainforest zone is only possible using artificial irrigation. Close to 30% of the world's irrigated agricultural lands also face problems due to salinity stress. Consequently, the research community must consider drought and salinity together when studying to empower breeding programs in order to develop superior genotypes adapted to those potential new areas for oil palm cultivation. Multi-Omics Integration (MOI) offers a new window of opportunity for the non-trivial challenge of unraveling the mechanisms behind multigenic traits, such as drought and salinity tolerance. The current study carried out a comprehensive, large-scale, single-omics analysis (SOA), and MOI study on the leaves of young oil palm plants submitted to very high salinity stress. Taken together, a total of 1239 proteins were positively regulated, and 1660 were negatively regulated in transcriptomics and proteomics analyses. Meanwhile, the metabolomics analysis revealed 37 metabolites that were upregulated and 92 that were downregulated. After performing SOA, 436 differentially expressed (DE) full-length transcripts, 74 DE proteins, and 19 DE metabolites underwent MOI analysis, revealing several pathways affected by this stress, with at least one DE molecule in all three omics platforms used. The Cysteine and methionine metabolism (map00270) and Glycolysis/Gluconeogenesis (map00010) pathways were the most affected ones, each one with 20 DE molecules.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available