Plant-Environment Interactions (Jun 2021)

Elucidating the biochemical basis of trans‐16:1 fatty acid change in leaves during cold acclimation in wheat

  • Qiang Li,
  • Wenyun Shen,
  • Ioannis Mavraganis,
  • Liping Wang,
  • Peng Gao,
  • Jie Gao,
  • Dustin Cram,
  • Yifeng Li,
  • Ziying Liu,
  • David Brian Fowler,
  • Youlian Pan,
  • Jitao Zou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/pei3.10044
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 101 – 111

Abstract

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Abstract In plant cells, phosphatidylglycerol (PG) in the chloroplast has a characteristic trans‐∆3‐hexadecenoic acid (t16:1) at the sn‐2 position. The t16:1 content in wheat leaf tissues decreases during cold treatment, but the significance of this fatty acid compositional change and the underlying biochemical mechanism remains poorly understood. Using a large collection of wheat cultivars displaying a varying capacity of freezing tolerance, we show for the first time under field conditions that this low temperature induced t16:1 change is associated with winter hardiness. To explore the metabolic mechanism responsible for the reduction of t16:1, we performed detailed lipid analysis and comparative transcriptome study with four selected wheat lines under cold acclimation. Our results show that wheat leaf tissues experience a gradual decrease in chloroplast lipid pathway activity during cold acclimation and that the decline in chloroplast lipid synthesis manifests itself in the decrease of t16:1 in PG. Comparative RNA‐seq analyses with leaf tissues further reveal concerted transcriptome shifts indicating a rebalancing of chloroplast and cytosolic lipid synthesis during cold acclimation. Our study, thus, provides mechanistic understanding on chloroplast lipid adjustments as a “molecular ideotype” and the t16:1 change as a specific metabolite marker for screening freezing tolerance in wheat.

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