6533b7d0fe1ef96bd125af4a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The role of lipid metabolism in the acquisition of desiccation tolerance inCraterostigma plantagineum: a comparative approach

Isabel DombrinkUlrich ZähringerFrancisco GasullaFrancisco GasullaPeter DörmannNicolas GischKatharina Vom DorpDorothea Bartels

subject

ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesArabidopsisResurrection plantPlant ScienceBiologyDesiccation tolerancechemistry.chemical_compoundStress PhysiologicalTandem Mass SpectrometryLipid biosynthesisGeneticsDesiccationDiacylglycerol kinasePhospholipase Dved/biologyGalactolipidsHydrolysisLipid metabolismCell BiologyPhosphatidic acidLipid MetabolismchemistryBiochemistryCraterostigmaEmbryophytalipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Desiccation

description

Summary Dehydration leads to different physiological and biochemical responses in plants. We analysed the lipid composition and the expression of genes involved in lipid biosynthesis in the desiccation-tolerant plant Craterostigma plantagineum. A comparative approach was carried out with Lindernia brevidens (desiccation tolerant) and two desiccation-sensitive species, Lindernia subracemosa and Arabidopsis thaliana. In C. plantagineum the total lipid content remained constant while the lipid composition underwent major changes during desiccation. The most prominent change was the removal of monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG) from the thylakoids. Analysis of molecular species composition revealed that around 50% of 36:x (number of carbons in the acyl chains: number of double bonds) MGDG was hydrolysed and diacylglycerol (DAG) used for phospholipid synthesis, while another MGDG fraction was converted into digalactosyldiacylglycerol via the DGD1/DGD2 pathway and subsequently into oligogalactolipids by SFR2. 36:x-DAG was also employed for the synthesis of triacylglycerol. Phosphatidic acid (PA) increased in C. plantagineum, L. brevidens, and L. subracemosa, in agreement with a role of PA as an intermediate of lipid turnover and of phospholipase D in signalling during desiccation. 34:x-DAG, presumably derived from de novo assembly, was converted into phosphatidylinositol (PI) in C. plantagineum and L. brevidens, but not in desiccation-sensitive plants, suggesting that PI is involved in acquisition of desiccation tolerance. The accumulation of oligogalactolipids and PI in the chloroplast and extraplastidial membranes, respectively, increases the concentration of hydroxyl groups and enhances the ratio of bilayer- to non-bilayer-forming lipids, thus contributing to protein and membrane stabilization.

https://doi.org/10.1111/tpj.12241