H2 S improves salt-stress recovery via organic acid turn-over in apple seedlings

Plant Cell Environ. 2022 Oct;45(10):2923-2942. doi: 10.1111/pce.14410. Epub 2022 Aug 16.

Abstract

Signalling roles of hydrogen sulphide (H2 S) in stress biology are widely reported but not sufficiently established to urge its use in agronomic practice. Our lack of quantitative understanding of the metabolic rewiring in H2 S signalling makes it difficult to elucidate its functions in stress tolerance on the biochemical level. Here, Malus hupehensis Rehd. var. pingyiensis seedlings were first treated with salt stress for 2 weeks and then treated with four different concentrations of NaHS. Through vigorous investigations, including phenotypic analysis, 13 C transient labelling and targeted metabolic and transcriptomic analysis, for the first time in the seedlings of a woody fruit crop, we found out that H2 S recycles fixed carbons through glycolysis and tricarboxylic acid cycle to inhibit the futile accumulation of carbohydrates, to maintain an efficient CO2 assimilation, to keep a balanced starch metabolism, to produce sufficient H2 O2 , to maintain malate/γ-aminobutyric acid homeostasis via an H2 O2 -induced anion channel (aluminium-activated malate transporter) and eventually to improve salt-stress recovery. Our results systematically demonstrate the vital roles of central carbon metabolism in H2 S signalling and clarify the mode of action of H2 S in apple seedlings. We conclude that H2 S signalling interacts with central carbon metabolism in a bottom-up manner to recover plant growth after salt stress.

Keywords: 13C labelling; central carbon metabolism; plant growth recovery.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Carbon / metabolism
  • Malates / metabolism
  • Malus* / genetics
  • Malus* / metabolism
  • Salt Stress
  • Seedlings / metabolism

Substances

  • Malates
  • Carbon