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Leaf Lipid Alterations in Response to Heat Stress of Arabidopsis thaliana

Authors :
Sunitha Shiva
Thilani Samarakoon
Kaleb A. Lowe
Charles Roach
Hieu Sy Vu
Madeline Colter
Hollie Porras
Caroline Hwang
Mary R. Roth
Pamela Tamura
Maoyin Li
Kathrin Schrick
Jyoti Shah
Xuemin Wang
Haiyan Wang
Ruth Welti
Source :
Plants, Vol 9, Iss 7, p 845 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

In response to elevated temperatures, plants alter the activities of enzymes that affect lipid composition. While it has long been known that plant leaf membrane lipids become less unsaturated in response to heat, other changes, including polygalactosylation of galactolipids, head group acylation of galactolipids, increases in phosphatidic acid and triacylglycerols, and formation of sterol glucosides and acyl sterol glucosides, have been observed more recently. In this work, by measuring lipid levels with mass spectrometry, we confirm the previously observed changes in Arabidopsis thaliana leaf lipids under three heat stress regimens. Additionally, in response to heat, increased oxidation of the fatty acyl chains of leaf galactolipids, sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerols, and phosphatidylglycerols, and incorporation of oxidized acyl chains into acylated monogalactosyldiacylglycerols are shown. We also observed increased levels of digalactosylmonoacylglycerols and monogalactosylmonoacylglycerols. The hypothesis that a defect in sterol glycosylation would adversely affect regrowth of plants after a severe heat stress regimen was tested, but differences between wild-type and sterol glycosylation-defective plants were not detected.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22237747
Volume :
9
Issue :
7
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Plants
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2d1cf954bf494b8894f3295835a3cc04
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants9070845