• Gagan Paudel
  • Tatiana Bilova
  • Rico Schmidt
  • Uta Greifenhagen
  • Robert Berger
  • Elena Tarakhovskaya
  • Stefanie Stöckhardt
  • Gerd Ulrich Balcke
  • Klaus Humbeck
  • Wolfgang Brandt
  • Andrea Sinz
  • Thomas Vogt
  • Claudia Birkemeyer
  • Ludger Wessjohann
  • Andrej Frolov

Among the environmental alterations accompanying oncoming climate changes, drought is the most important factor influencing crop plant productivity. In plants, water deficit ultimately results in the development of oxidative stress and accumulation of osmolytes (e.g. amino acids and carbohydrates) in all tissues. Up-regulation of sugar biosynthesis in parallel to the increasing overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) might enhance protein glycation, i.e. interaction of carbonyl compounds, reducing sugars and a-dicarbonyls with lysyl and arginyl side-chains yielding early (Amadori and Heyns compounds) and advanced glycation end-products (AGEs). Although the constitutive plant protein glycation patterns were characterized recently, the effects of environmental stress on AGE formation are unknown so far. To fill this gap, we present here a comprehensive in-depth study of the changes in Arabidopsis thaliana advanced glycated proteome related to osmotic stress. A 3 d application of osmotic stress revealed 31 stress-specifically and 12 differentially AGEmodified proteins, representing altogether 56 advanced glycation sites. Based on proteomic and metabolomic results, in combination with biochemical, enzymatic and gene expression analysis, we propose monosaccharide autoxidation as the main stress-related glycation mechanism, and glyoxal as the major glycation agent in plants subjected to drought.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6283-6295
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of Experimental Botany
Volume67
Issue number22
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2016

    Research areas

  • Advanced glycation end-products (AGEs), Arabidopsis thaliana, Crop quality, Drought stress, Food quality, Glycation, Label-free quantification, Plant proteomics, Two-dimensional chromatography

    Scopus subject areas

  • Physiology
  • Plant Science

ID: 7599381