in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase family enhances cold stress tolerance in maize.

Front Plant Sci

National Coarse Cereals Engineering Research Center, Heilongjiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Crop-Pest Interaction Biology and Ecological Control, Heilongjiang Bayi Agricultural University, Daqing, Heilongjiang, China.

Published: March 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • G6PDH is an essential enzyme in maize’s metabolic pathway, helping produce NADPH, which is crucial for cellular stress responses and maintaining balance in redox reactions.
  • The study identified and classified five maize G6PDH gene family members into different forms based on their location in the cell and their expression patterns during various developmental stages and stress conditions.
  • Results show that one specific form, ZmG6PDH1, responds strongly to cold stress; knocking it out increases cold sensitivity and disrupts redox balance, leading to more oxidative damage and cell death in the maize mutants.

Article Abstract

Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) is a key enzyme in the pentose phosphate pathway responsible for the generation of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH), thereby playing a central role in facilitating cellular responses to stress and maintaining redox homeostasis. This study aimed to characterize five gene family members in maize. The classification of these ZmG6PDHs into plastidic and cytosolic isoforms was enabled by phylogenetic and transit peptide predictive analyses and confirmed by subcellular localization imaging analyses using maize mesophyll protoplasts. These genes exhibited distinctive expression patterns across tissues and developmental stages. Exposure to stressors, including cold, osmotic stress, salinity, and alkaline conditions, also significantly affected the expression and activity of the , with particularly high expression of a cytosolic isoform (ZmG6PDH1) in response to cold stress and closely correlated with G6PDH enzymatic activity, suggesting that it may play a central role in shaping responses to cold conditions. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knockout of on the B73 background led to enhanced cold stress sensitivity. Significant changes in the redox status of the NADPH, ascorbic acid (ASA), and glutathione (GSH) pools were observed after exposure of the mutants to cold stress, with this disrupted redox balance contributing to increased production of reactive oxygen species and resultant cellular damage and death. Overall, these results highlight the importance of cytosolic in supporting maize resistance to cold stress, at least in part by producing NADPH that can be used by the ASA-GSH cycle to mitigate cold-induced oxidative damage.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10034328PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2023.1116237DOI Listing

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