Drought and Recovery: Independently Regulated Processes Highlighting the Importance of Protein Turnover Dynamics and Translational Regulation in Medicago truncatula
Author
Lyon, David
Castillejo Sanchez, Maria Angeles
Mehmeti-Tershani, Vlora
Staudinger, Christiana
Kleemaier, Christoph
Wienkoop, Stefanie
Publisher
ElsevierDate
2016METS:
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Show full item recordAbstract
Climate change in conjunction with population growth
necessitates a systems biology approach to characterize
plant drought acclimation as well as a more thorough
understanding of the molecular mechanisms of stress
recovery. Plants are exposed to a continuously changing
environment. Extremes such as several weeks of drought
are followed by rain. This requires a molecular plasticity of
the plant enabling drought acclimation and the necessity
of deacclimation processes for recovery and continuous
growth.
During drought stress and subsequent recovery, the
metabolome and proteome are regulated through a sequence
of molecular processes including synthesis and
degradation and molecular interaction networks are part
of this regulatory process. In order to study this complex
regulatory network, a comprehensive analysis is presented
for the first time, investigating protein turnover
and regulatory classes of proteins and metabolites during
a stress recovery scenario in the model legume Medicago
truncatula. The data give novel insights into the molecular
capacity and differential processes required for acclimation
and deacclimation of severe drought stressed plants.
Functional cluster and network analyses unraveled independent
regulatory mechanisms for stress and recovery
with different dynamic phases that during the course
of recovery define the plants deacclimation from stress.
The combination of relative abundance levels and turnover
analysis revealed an early transition phase that
seems key for recovery initiation through water resupply
and is independent from renutrition. Thus, a first indication
for a metabolite and protein-based load capacity was
observed necessary for the recovery from drought, an
important but thus far ignored possible feature toward
tolerance. The data indicate that apart from the plants
molecular stress response mechanisms, plasticity may
be related to the nutritional status of the plant prior to
stress initiation. A new perspective and possible new
targets as well as metabolic mechanisms for future
plant-bioengineering toward enhanced drought stress
tolerance are presented.