Enhanced Salt Tolerance of Rhizobia-inoculated Soybean Correlates with Decreased Phosphorylation of the Transcription Factor GmMYB183 and Altered Flavonoid Biosynthesis.

Mol Cell Proteomics

College of Life and Environmental Sciences, Hangzhou Normal University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, 310036, PR China; Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory for Genetic Improvement and Quality Control of Medicinal Plants. Electronic address:

Published: November 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Soybean is a crucial food source, but its growth is hindered by salinity stress. Researchers discovered that inoculating soybeans with rhizobia bacteria improves their salt tolerance, although the mechanisms behind this effect were unclear.
  • Analysis of phosphoproteins revealed that 800 phosphopeptides changed with rhizobia treatment, with 32 linked to flavonoid production, particularly transcription factors like GmMYB183, which appear to influence salt resistance.
  • GmMYB183 was found to regulate a gene responsible for making ononin, a flavonoid that hampers salt tolerance; inhibiting GmMYB183 via rhizobia led to better salt tolerance in soybeans.

Article Abstract

Soybean ( (L.) Merrill) is an important component of the human diet and animal feed, but soybean production is limited by abiotic stresses especially salinity. We recently found that rhizobia inoculation enhances soybean tolerance to salt stress, but the underlying mechanisms are unaddressed. Here, we used quantitative phosphoproteomic and metabonomic approaches to identify changes in phosphoproteins and metabolites in soybean roots treated with rhizobia inoculation and salt. Results revealed differential regulation of 800 phosphopeptides, at least 32 of these phosphoproteins or their homologous were reported be involved in flavonoid synthesis or trafficking, and 27 out of 32 are transcription factors. We surveyed the functional impacts of all these 27 transcription factors by expressing their phospho-mimetic/ablative mutants in the roots of composite soybean plants and found that phosphorylation of GmMYB183 could affect the salt tolerance of the transgenic roots. Using data mining, ChIP and EMSA, we found that GmMYB183 binds to the promoter of the soybean gene encoding for a Cytochrome P450 monooxygenase which contributes to the accumulation of ononin, a monohydroxy B-ring flavonoid that negatively regulates soybean tolerance to salinity. Phosphorylation of GmMYB183 was inhibited by rhizobia inoculation; overexpression of enhanced the expression of and rendered salt sensitivity to the transgenic roots; plants deficient in GmMYB183 function are more tolerant to salt stress as compared with wild-type soybean plants, these results correlate with the transcriptional induction of by GmMYB183 and the subsequent accumulation of ononin. Our findings provide molecular insights into how rhizobia enhance salt tolerance of soybean plants.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6823849PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.RA119.001704DOI Listing

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