Glycine max (L.) Merr. (Soybean) metabolome responses to potassium availability

被引:2
|
作者
Cotrim, Gustavo dos Santos [1 ,4 ]
da Silva, Deivid Metzker [2 ,4 ]
da Graca, Jose Perez [3 ,4 ]
de Oliveira Junior, Adilson [4 ]
de Castro, Cesar [4 ]
Zocolo, Guilherme Juliao [5 ]
Lannes, Luciola Santos [1 ]
Hoffmann-Campo, Clara Beatriz [4 ]
机构
[1] Sao Paulo State Univ UNESP, BR-15385000 Ilha Solteira, SP, Brazil
[2] Santa Catarina Fed Univ UFSC, BR-88040900 Florianopolis, SC, Brazil
[3] Maringa State Univ UEM, BR-87020900 Maringa, PR, Brazil
[4] Brazilian Agr Res Corp Embrapa Soybean, Caixa Postal 231, BR-86001970 Londrina, PR, Brazil
[5] Brazilian Agr Res Corp Embrapa Agroind Trop, BR-60511110 Fortaleza, CE, Brazil
关键词
Glycine max; Fabaceae; Potassium deficiency; Phytoalexins; Specialised metabolism; Abiotic stress; Metabolomics; Ionomics; ANTIOXIDANT ACTIVITY; MAGNESIUM-DEFICIENT; DISEASE RESISTANCE; NUTRITIONAL-STATUS; OXIDATIVE STRESS; LEAVES; FERTILIZATION; ISOFLAVONES; ARABIDOPSIS; ENZYMES;
D O I
10.1016/j.phytochem.2022.113472
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Potassium (K+) has vital physiological and metabolic functions in plants and its availability can impact tolerance to biotic and abiotic stress conditions. Limited studies have investigated the effect of K+ fertilization on soybean metabolism. Using integrated omics, ionomics and metabolomics, we investigated the field-grown Glycine max (soybean) response, after four K+ soil fertilization rates. Soybean leaf and pod tissue (valves and immature seeds) extracts were analysed by ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry (UPLC-HRMS) and inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES). Multivariate analyses (PCA-X&Y e O2PLS-DA) showed that 51 compounds of 19 metabolic pathways were regulated in response to K+ availability. Under very low potassium availability, soybean plants accumulated of Ca2+, Mg2+, Fe2+, Cu2+, and B in young and old leaves. Potassium fertilization upregulated carbohydrate, galactolipid, and flavonol glycoside biosynthesis in leaves and pod valves, while K+ deficient pod tissues showed increasing amino acids, oligosaccharides, benzoic acid derivatives, and isoflavones contents. Severely K+ deficient soils elicited isoflavones, coumestans, pterocarpans, and soyasaponins in trifoliate leaves, likely associated to oxidative and photodynamic stress status. Additionally, results demonstrate that L-asparagine content is higher in potassium deficient tissues, suggesting this compound as a biomarker of K+ deficiency in soybean plants. These results demonstrate that potassium soil fertilization did not linearly contribute to changes in specialised constitutive metabolites of soybean. Altogether, this work provides a reference for improving the understanding of soybean metabolism as dependent on K+ availability.
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页数:16
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