Publications - Cell and Metabolic Biology
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This page was last modified on 27 Jan 2025 .
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Publications - Cell and Metabolic Biology
Publications
Several commercially important secondary metabolites are produced and accumulated in high amounts by glandular trichomes, giving the prospect of using them as metabolic cell factories. Due to extremely high metabolic fluxes through glandular trichomes, previous research focused on how such flows are achieved. The question regarding their bioenergetics became even more interesting with the discovery of photosynthetic activity in some glandular trichomes. Despite recent advances, how primary metabolism contributes to the high metabolic fluxes in glandular trichomes is still not fully elucidated. Using computational methods and available multi-omics data, we first developed a quantitative framework to investigate the possible role of photosynthetic energy supply in terpenoid production and next tested experimentally the simulation-driven hypothesis. With this work, we provide the first reconstruction of specialised metabolism in Type-VI photosynthetic glandular trichomes of Solanum lycopersicum. Our model predicted that increasing light intensities results in a shift of carbon partitioning from catabolic to anabolic reactions driven by the energy availability of the cell. Moreover, we show the benefit of shifting between isoprenoid pathways under different light regimes, leading to a production of different classes of terpenes. Our computational predictions were confirmed in vivo, demonstrating a significant increase in production of monoterpenoids while the sesquiterpenes remained unchanged under higher light intensities. The outcomes of this research provide quantitative measures to assess the beneficial role of chloroplast in glandular trichomes for enhanced production of secondary metabolites and can guide the design of new experiments that aim at modulating terpenoid production.
Publications
Wind, rain, herbivores, obstacles, neighbouring plants, etc. provide important mechanical cues to steerplant growth and survival. Mechanostimulation to stimulate yield and stress resistance of crops is of signifi-cant research interest, yet a molecular understanding of transcriptional responses to touch is largely absentin cereals. To address this, we performed whole-genome transcriptomics following mechanostimulation ofwheat, barley, and the recent genome-sequenced oat. The largest transcriptome changes occurred 25 minafter touching, with most of the genes being upregulated. While most genes returned to basal expressionlevel by 1–2 h in oat, many genes retained high expression even 4 h post-treatment in barley and wheat.Functional categories such as transcription factors, kinases, phytohormones, and Ca2+regulation wereaffected. In addition, cell wall-related genes involved in (hemi)cellulose, lignin, suberin, and callose biosyn-thesis were touch-responsive, providing molecular insight into mechanically induced changes in cell wallcomposition. Furthermore, several cereal-specific transcriptomic footprints were identified that were notobserved in Arabidopsis. In oat and barley, we found evidence for systemic spreading of touch-induced sig-nalling. Finally, we provide evidence that both the jasmonic acid-dependent and the jasmonic acid-independent pathways underlie touch-signalling in cereals, providing a detailed framework and markergenes for further study of (a)biotic stress responses in cereals.
This page was last modified on 27 Jan 2025 .