Metabolites (Sep 2023)

Non-Targeted Metabolomic Analysis of <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i> (L.) Heynh: Metabolic Adaptive Responses to Stress Caused by N Starvation

  • Jorge David Cadena-Zamudio,
  • Juan Luis Monribot-Villanueva,
  • Claudia-Anahí Pérez-Torres,
  • Fulgencio Alatorre-Cobos,
  • José Antonio Guerrero-Analco,
  • Enrique Ibarra-Laclette

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo13091021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 9
p. 1021

Abstract

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As sessile organisms, plants develop the ability to respond and survive in changing environments. Such adaptive responses maximize phenotypic and metabolic fitness, allowing plants to adjust their growth and development. In this study, we analyzed the metabolic plasticity of Arabidopsis thaliana in response to nitrate deprivation by untargeted metabolomic analysis and using wild-type (WT) genotypes and the loss-of-function nia1/nia2 double mutant. Secondary metabolites were identified using seedlings grown on a hydroponic system supplemented with optimal or limiting concentrations of N (4 or 0.2 mM, respectively) and harvested at 15 and 30 days of age. Then, spectral libraries generated from shoots and roots in both ionization modes (ESI +/−) were compared. Totals of 3407 and 4521 spectral signals (m/z_rt) were obtained in the ESI+ and ESI− modes, respectively. Of these, approximately 50 and 65% were identified as differentially synthetized/accumulated. This led to the presumptive identification of 735 KEGG codes (metabolites) belonging to 79 metabolic pathways. The metabolic responses in the shoots and roots of WT genotypes at 4 mM of N favor the synthesis/accumulation of metabolites strongly related to growth. In contrast, for the nia1/nia2 double mutant (similar as the WT genotype at 0.2 mM N), metabolites identified as differentially synthetized/accumulated help cope with stress, regulating oxidative stress and preventing programmed cell death, meaning that metabolic responses under N starvation compromise growth to prioritize a defensive response.

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