1. Comparative proteomic and metabolomic analyses reveal stress responses of hemp to salinity.
- Author
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Yang Y, Cheng Y, Lu Z, Ye H, Du G, and Li Z
- Subjects
- Salt Stress, Photosynthesis drug effects, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant drug effects, Stress, Physiological, Plant Leaves metabolism, Plant Leaves drug effects, Plant Leaves genetics, Sodium Chloride pharmacology, Chlorophyll metabolism, Metabolome drug effects, Phenotype, Cannabis metabolism, Cannabis genetics, Cannabis physiology, Cannabis drug effects, Proteomics methods, Metabolomics methods, Plant Proteins metabolism, Plant Proteins genetics, Salinity
- Abstract
Key Message: Integrated omics analyses outline the cellular and metabolic events of hemp plants in response to salt stress and highlight several photosynthesis and energy metabolism related pathways as key regulatory points. Soil salinity affects many physiological processes of plants and leads to crop yield losses worldwide. For hemp, a crop that is valued for multiple aspects, such as its medical compounds, fibre, and seed, a comprehensive understanding of its salt stress responses is a prerequisite for resistance breeding and tailoring its agronomic performance to suit certain industrial applications. Here, we first observed the phenotype of salt-stressed hemp plants and found that under NaCl treatment, hemp plants displayed pronounced growth defects, as indicated by the significantly reduced average height, number of leaves, and chlorophyll content. Next, we conducted comparative proteomics and metabolomics to dissect the complex salt-stress response mechanisms. A total of 314 proteins and 649 metabolites were identified to be differentially behaving upon NaCl treatment. Functional classification and enrichment analysis unravelled that many differential proteins were proteases associated with photosynthesis. Through metabolic pathway enrichment, several energy-related pathways were found to be altered, such as the biosynthesis and degradation of branched-chain amino acids, and our network analysis showed that many ribosomal proteins were involved in these metabolic adaptations. Taken together, for hemp plants, influences on chloroplast function probably represent a major toxic effect of salinity, and modulating several energy-producing pathways possibly through translational regulation is presumably a key protective mechanism against the negative impacts. Our data and analyses provide insights into our understanding of hemp's stress biology and may lay a foundation for future functional genomics studies., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2024
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