Multiomics unravels potential molecular switches in the C3 to CAM transition of Mesembryanthemum crystallinum

Elsevier

Available online 29 February 2024, 105145

Journal of ProteomicsAuthor links open overlay panel, , , , , , , Highlights•

Multiomics revealed molecular changes during the ice plant C3 to CAM transition.

V-type H+-ATPase changes correlated with CAM initiation at transcriptional and translational levels.

Nocturnal ABA signaling pathway was inhibited during the C3 to CAM transition.

Inositol methylation activation and oxidation inhibition may play a role in the CAM transition.

Circadian regulation was mostly at transcriptional level.

Abstract

Mesembryanthemum crystallinum (common ice plant), a facultative CAM plant, shifts from C3 to CAM photosynthesis under salt stress, enhancing water use efficiency. Here we used transcriptomics, proteomics, and targeted metabolomics to profile molecular changes during the diel cycle of C3 to CAM transition. The results confirmed expected changes associated with CAM photosynthesis, starch biosynthesis and degradation, and glycolysis/gluconeogenesis. Importantly, they yielded new discoveries: 1) Transcripts displayed greater circadian regulation than proteins. 2) Oxidative phosphorylation and inositol methylation may play important roles in initiating the transition. 3) V-type H+-ATPases showed consistent transcriptional regulation, aiding in vacuolar malate uptake. 4) A protein phosphatase 2C, a major component in the ABA signaling pathway, may trigger the C3 to CAM transition. Our work highlights the potential molecular switches in the C3 to CAM transition, including the potential role of ABA signaling.

Significance

The common ice plant is a model facultative CAM plant, and under stress conditions it can shift from C3 to CAM photosynthesis within a three-day period. However, knowledge about the molecular changes during the transition and the molecular switches enabling the transition is lacking. Multi-omic analyses not only revealed the molecular changes during the transition, but also highlighted the importance of ABA signaling, inositol methylation, V-type H+-ATPase in initiating the shift. The findings may explain physiological changes and nocturnal stomatal opening, and inform future synthetic biology effort in improving crop water use efficiency and stress resilience.

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