Frontiers in Plant Science (Sep 2022)

A mathematical model for strigolactone biosynthesis in plants

  • Abel Lucido,
  • Abel Lucido,
  • Oriol Basallo,
  • Oriol Basallo,
  • Albert Sorribas,
  • Albert Sorribas,
  • Alberto Marin-Sanguino,
  • Alberto Marin-Sanguino,
  • Ester Vilaprinyo,
  • Ester Vilaprinyo,
  • Rui Alves,
  • Rui Alves

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.979162
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

Read online

Strigolactones mediate plant development, trigger symbiosis with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, are abundant in 80% of the plant kingdom and help plants gain resistance to environmental stressors. They also induce germination of parasitic plant seeds that are endemic to various continents, such as Orobanche in Europe or Asia and Striga in Africa. The genes involved in the early stages of strigolactones biosynthesis are known in several plants. The regulatory structure and the latter parts of the pathway, where flux branching occurs to produce alternative strigolactones, are less well-understood. Here we present a computational study that collects the available experimental evidence and proposes alternative biosynthetic pathways that are consistent with that evidence. Then, we test the alternative pathways through in silico simulation experiments and compare those experiments to experimental information. Our results predict the differences in dynamic behavior between alternative pathway designs. Independent of design, the analysis suggests that feedback regulation is unlikely to exist in strigolactone biosynthesis. In addition, our experiments suggest that engineering the pathway to modulate the production of strigolactones could be most easily achieved by increasing the flux of β-carotenes going into the biosynthetic pathway. Finally, we find that changing the ratio of alternative strigolactones produced by the pathway can be done by changing the activity of the enzymes after the flux branching points.

Keywords