Metabolic flexibility during a trophic transition reveals the phenotypic plasticity of greater duckweed (Spirodela polyrhiza 7498)

Author:

Sun Zuoliang12ORCID,Zhao Xuyao1ORCID,Li Gaojie1ORCID,Yang Jingjing1ORCID,Chen Yan1ORCID,Xia Manli12ORCID,Hwang Inhwan3ORCID,Hou Hongwei12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The State Key Laboratory of Freshwater Ecology and Biotechnology, The Key Laboratory of Aquatic Biodiversity and Conservation of Chinese Academy of Sciences Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Wuhan 430072 Hubei China

2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100049 China

3. Department of Life Science Pohang University of Science and Technology Pohang 37673 Korea

Abstract

Summary The greater duckweed (Spirodela polyrhiza 7498) exhibits trophic diversity (photoautotrophic, heterotrophic, photoheterotrophic, and mixotrophic growth) depending on the availability of exogenous organic carbon sources and light. Here, we show that the ability to transition between various trophic growth conditions is an advantageous trait, providing great phenotypic plasticity and metabolic flexibility in S. polyrhiza 7498. By comparing S. polyrhiza 7498 growth characteristics, metabolic acclimation, and cellular ultrastructure across these trophic modes, we show that mixotrophy decreases photosynthetic performance and relieves the CO2 limitation of photosynthesis by enhancing the CO2 supply through the active respiration pathway. Proteomic and metabolomic analyses corroborated that S. polyrhiza 7498 increases its intracellular CO2 and decreases reactive oxygen species under mixotrophic and heterotrophic conditions, which substantially suppressed the wasteful photorespiration and oxidative‐damage pathways. As a consequence, mixotrophy resulted in a higher biomass yield than the sum of photoautotrophy and heterotrophy. Our work provides a basis for using trophic transitions in S. polyrhiza 7498 for the enhanced accumulation of value‐added products.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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