4.7 Article

Genotypes of Eruca vesicaria subsp. sativa grown in contrasting field environments differ on transcriptomic and metabolomic levels, significantly impacting nutritional quality

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1218984

Keywords

glucosinolates; isothiocyanates; brassicaceae; transcriptome sequencing; volatile organic compounds; arugula

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigated the phytochemical and transcriptomic differences between Rocket crops grown in Italy and the UK. The results showed that the growth environment influenced the volatile organic compounds and sulfur-related gene expression in Rocket. Rocket grown in Italy had higher sulfur content and sulfur-containing glucosinolates. Rocket grown in the UK had higher sugar concentrations and different volatile organic compound profiles.
Rocket (Eruca vesicaria subsp. sativa) is a source of sulfur-containing glucosinolates (GSLs). GSLs and their breakdown hydrolysis products (GHPs) are responsible for health-related benefits, such as anti-cancer and anti-neurodegenerative properties. Understanding how phytochemical composition changes between cultivation environments is key to developing cultivars with improved nutritional quality. Two consecutive harvests (first and second regrowth) of crops, grown in both Italy and the UK, were used to determine the phytochemical and transcriptomic differences between six lines of Eruca. Samples were taken upon delivery from field sites (D0) and after five days of cold storage (D5) for each location. Leaves were analysed for sulfur content, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), GSLs, GHPs, and sugars. Transcriptome data were associated with metabolite profiles to identify differentially expressed genes between plants grown in the two environments. VOC compounds (carbon disulfide, methyl thiocyanate) were associated with growth environment and with differences in sulfur metabolism gene expression (APR2, LSU2, LSU3, SDI1, SiR), GSL biosynthesis (MYB28, FMOGS-OX2) and GHP formation (ESM1, TGG1, TGG2). The concentrations of sugars were an order of magnitude greater in UK grown samples (up to 29.9 mg g(-1) dry weight; dw). Sulfur content was significantly higher in the Italy plant samples (11.4 - 20.1 mg g(-1) dw), which was in turn associated with higher concentrations of GSLs (pentyl GSL, up to 15.8 mu mol g(-1) dw; sinigrin, up to 0.005 mu mol g(-1) dw; glucoraphanin, up to 5.1 mu mol g(-1) dw; glucorucolamine, up to 23.6 mu mol g(-1) dw; neoglucobrassicin, up to 5.3 mu mol g(-1) dw) and hydrolysis products (sativin, up to 13.5 mu mol g(-1) dw; erucin, up to 1 mu mol g(-1) dw; sulforaphane, up to 34.7 mu mol g(-1) dw). VOC profiles of plants cultivated in the UK were distinct from Italy grown plants, with higher relative abundances of alkanes and esters in second cut and shelf-life (D5) samples. The data indicate a significant interaction of cultivar response with environment, highlighting the difficulty of producing Eruca crops with consistent phytochemical and postharvest traits. Genes with differential expression between plants grown in Italy and the UK could be used as markers of phytochemical quality and composition.

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