Scientific Reports (Nov 2020)

Functional characterisation of the transcriptome from leaf tissue of the fluoroacetate-producing plant, Dichapetalum cymosum, in response to mechanical wounding

  • Selisha A. Sooklal,
  • Phelelani T. Mpangase,
  • Mihai-Silviu Tomescu,
  • Shaun Aron,
  • Scott Hazelhurst,
  • Robert H. Archer,
  • Karl Rumbold

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-77598-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Dichapetalum cymosum produces the toxic fluorinated metabolite, fluoroacetate, presumably as a defence mechanism. Given the rarity of fluorinated metabolites in nature, the biosynthetic origin and function of fluoroacetate have been of particular interest. However, the mechanism for fluorination in D. cymosum was never elucidated. More importantly, there is a severe lack in knowledge on a genetic level for fluorometabolite-producing plants, impeding research on the subject. Here, we report on the first transcriptome for D. cymosum and investigate the wound response for insights into fluorometabolite production. Mechanical wounding studies were performed and libraries of the unwounded (control) and wounded (30 and 60 min post wounding) plant were sequenced using the Illumina HiSeq platform. A combined reference assembly generated 77,845 transcripts. Using the SwissProt, TrEMBL, GO, eggNOG, KEGG, Pfam, EC and PlantTFDB databases, a 69% annotation rate was achieved. Differential expression analysis revealed the regulation of 364 genes in response to wounding. The wound responses in D. cymosum included key mechanisms relating to signalling cascades, phytohormone regulation, transcription factors and defence-related secondary metabolites. However, the role of fluoroacetate in inducible wound responses remains unclear. Bacterial fluorinases were searched against the D. cymosum transcriptome but transcripts with homology were not detected suggesting the presence of a potentially different fluorinating enzyme in plants. Nevertheless, the transcriptome produced in this study significantly increases genetic resources available for D. cymosum and will assist with future research into fluorometabolite-producing plants.