International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Sep 2022)

Genome-Wide Identification of Polyamine Oxidase (PAO) Family Genes: Roles of <i>CaPAO2</i> and <i>CaPAO4</i> in the Cold Tolerance of Pepper (<i>Capsicum annuum</i> L.)

  • Jianwei Zhang,
  • Le Liang,
  • Jiachang Xiao,
  • Yongdong Xie,
  • Li Zhu,
  • Xinru Xue,
  • Linyu Xu,
  • Peihan Zhou,
  • Jianzhao Ran,
  • Zhi Huang,
  • Guochao Sun,
  • Yunsong Lai,
  • Bo Sun,
  • Yi Tang,
  • Huanxiu Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23179999
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 17
p. 9999

Abstract

Read online

Polyamine oxidases (PAOs), which are flavin adenine dinucleotide-dependent enzymes, catalyze polyamine (PA) catabolism, producing hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Several PAO family members have been identified in plants, but their expression in pepper plants remains unclear. Here, six PAO genes were identified in the ‘Zunla-1’ pepper genome (named CaPAO1–CaPAO6 according to their chromosomal positions). The PAO proteins were divided into four subfamilies according to phylogenetics: CaPAO1 belongs to subfamily I; CaPAO3 and CaPAO5 belong to subfamily III; and CaPAO2, CaPAO4, and CaPAO6 belong to subfamily IV (none belong to subfamily II). CaPAO2, CaPAO4, and CaPAO6 were ubiquitously and highly expressed in all tissues, CaPAO1 was mainly expressed in flowers, whereas CaPAO3 and CaPAO5 were expressed at very low levels in all tissues. RNA-seq analysis revealed that CaPAO2 and CaPAO4 were notably upregulated by cold stress. CaPAO2 and CaPAO4 were localized in the peroxisome, and spermine was the preferred substrate for PA catabolism. CaPAO2 and CaPAO4 overexpression in Arabidopsis thaliana significantly enhanced freezing-stress tolerance by increasing antioxidant enzyme activity and decreasing malondialdehyde, H2O2, and superoxide accumulation, accompanied by the upregulation of cold-responsive genes (AtCOR15A, AtRD29A, AtCOR47, and AtKIN1). Thus, we identified candidate PAO genes for breeding cold-stress-tolerant transgenic pepper cultivars.

Keywords