PubMed 36448213

PubMed ID: 36448213

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An alternative pathway to plant cold tolerance in the absence of vacuolar invertase activity.
Authors: Teper-Bamnolker Paula, Roitman Marina, Katar Omri, Peleg Noam, Aruchamy Kalaivani, Suher Shlomit, Doron-Faigenboim Adi, Leibman Diana, Omid Ayelet, Belausov Eduard, Andersson Mariette, Olsson Niklas, Fält Ann-Sofie, Volpin Hanne, Hofvander Per, Gal-On Amit, Eshel Dani
Journal: The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology (Plant J), Vol.113(2), 2023‑Jan

DOI: 10.1111/tpj.16049 PMCID: PMC3973568

Abstract
To cope with cold stress, plants have developed antioxidation strategies combined with osmoprotection by sugars. In potato (Solanum tuberosum) tubers, which are swollen stems, exposure to cold stress induces starch degradation and sucrose synthesis. Vacuolar acid invertase (VInv) activity is a significant part of the cold-induced sweetening (CIS) response, by rapidly cleaving sucrose into hexoses and increasing osmoprotection. To discover alternative plant tissue pathways for coping with cold stress, we produced VInv-knockout lines in two cultivars. Genome editing of VInv in 'Désirée' and 'Brooke' was done using stable and transient expression of CRISPR/Cas9 components, respectively. After storage at 4°C, sugar analysis indicated that the knockout lines showed low levels of CIS and maintained low acid invertase activity in storage. Surprisingly, the tuber parenchyma of vinv lines exhibited significantly reduced lipid peroxidation and reduced H2 O2 levels. Furthermore, whole plants of vinv lines exposed to cold stress without irrigation showed normal vigor, in contrast to WT plants, which wilted. Transcriptome analysis of vinv lines revealed upregulation of an osmoprotectant pathway and ethylene-related genes during cold temperature exposure. Accordingly, higher expression of antioxidant-related genes was detected after exposure to short and long cold storage. Sugar measurements showed an elevation of an alternative pathway in the absence of VInv activity, raising the raffinose pathway with increasing levels of myo-inositol content as a cold tolerance response.
Publication Types
Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Keywords
Solanum tuberosum CRISPR/Cas9 cold stress cold-induced sweetening potato transcriptome vacuolar invertase
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