4.7 Article

Physiological and Transcriptomic Analyses Reveal the Effects of Elevated Root-Zone CO2 on the Metabolism of Sugars and Starch in the Roots of Oriental Melon Seedlings

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232012537

Keywords

high root-zone CO2; oriental melon seedlings; root growth; sugar and starch metabolism; transcriptomic analysis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31101582]
  2. China Agriculture Research System [CARS-25]
  3. Shenyang Science and Technology Project [22-317-2-07]

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Elevated root-zone CO2 concentration affects the microstructure, sugar and starch content, enzymatic activities, and gene expression in the roots of oriental melon seedlings. It alters the cellular microstructure, accelerates starch grain accumulation and release, disrupts organelle formation, and accelerates root senescence. The sugar and starch contents and metabolic activity in the roots increase following treatment. Gene expression analysis reveals differentially expressed genes related to metabolic pathways. The study provides insights into the molecular mechanism underlying oriental melon seedlings' response to elevated root-zone CO2 stress.
Root-zone CO2 is a major factor that affects crop growth, development, nutrient uptake, and metabolism. Oriental melon is affected by root-zone gases during growth, the microstructure, sugar and starch contents, enzymatic activities related to sugar and starch metabolism, and gene expression in the roots of oriental melon seedlings were investigated under three root-zone CO2 concentrations (CK: 0.2%, T1: 0.4%, T2: 1.1%). Elevated root-zone CO2 altered the cellular microstructure, accelerated the accumulation and release of starch grains, disrupted organelle formation, and accelerated root senescence. The sugar and starch contents and metabolic activity in the roots increased within a short duration following treatment. Compared to the control, 232 and 1492 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified on the 6th day of treatment in T1 and T2 plants, respectively. The DEGs were enriched in three metabolic pathways. The majority of genes related to sucrose and starch hydrolysis were upregulated, while the genes related to sucrose metabolism were downregulated. The study revealed that oriental melon seedlings adapt to elevated root-zone CO2 stress by adjusting sugar and starch metabolism at the transcriptome level and provides new insights into the molecular mechanism underlying the response to elevated root-zone CO2 stress.

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