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Glycosylation mode of phloretin affects the morphology and stress resistance of apple plant.

Authors :
Wang, Haojie
Jian, Liru
Wang, Zhipeng
Jiao, Yu
Wang, Yuzhu
Ma, Fengwang
Li, Pengmin
Source :
Plant, Cell & Environment. Jul2024, p1. 18p. 10 Illustrations.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Phloretin has different glycosylation modes in plants. Phlorizin (phloretin 2′‐<italic>O</italic>‐glucoside) is one of the glycosylation products of phloretin, and accumulates abundantly in apple plants. However, it is still unclear whether phlorizin is more beneficial for apple plants compared with other glycosylation products of phloretin. We created transgenic apple plants with different glycosylation modes of phloretin. In transgenic plants, the accumulation of phlorizin was partly replaced by that of trilobatin (phloretin 4′‐<italic>O</italic>‐glucoside) or phloretin 3′,5′‐di‐<italic>C</italic>‐glycoside. Compared with wild type, transgenic plants with less phlorizin showed dwarf phenotype, larger stomatal size, higher stomatal density and less tolerance to drought stress. Transcriptome and phytohormones assay indicate that phlorizin might regulate stomatal development and behaviour via controlling auxin and abscisic acid signalling pathways as well as carbonic anhydrase expressions. Transgenic apple plants with less phlorizin also showed less resistance to spider mites. Apple plants may hydrolyse phlorizin to produce phloretin, but cannot hydrolyse trilobatin or phloretin 3′,5′‐di‐<italic>C</italic>‐glycoside. Compared with its glycosylation products, phloretin is more toxic to spider mites. These results suggest that the glycosylation of phloretin to produce phlorizin is the optimal glycosylation mode in apple plants, and plays an important role in apple resistance to stresses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01407791
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Plant, Cell & Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178372707
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/pce.15031