J Integr Plant Biol ›› 2016, Vol. 58 ›› Issue (1): 2-11.DOI: 10.1111/jipb.12370

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Multi-scale modeling of Arabidopsis thaliana response to different CO2 conditions: From gene expression to metabolic flux

Lin Liu1, Fangzhou Shen1, Changpeng Xin2,3 and Zhuo Wang1,2*   

  • 收稿日期:2015-04-20 接受日期:2015-05-20 出版日期:2015-05-23 发布日期:2015-05-23

Multi-scale modeling of Arabidopsis thaliana response to different CO2 conditions: From gene expression to metabolic flux

Lin Liu1, Fangzhou Shen1, Changpeng Xin2,3 and Zhuo Wang1,2*   

  1. 1School of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China
    2Key Laboratory of Computational Biology, CAS-MPG Partner Institute for Computational Biology, Shanghai Institutes of Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, China
    3Shanghai Botanical Garden, Shanghai, China
  • Received:2015-04-20 Accepted:2015-05-20 Online:2015-05-23 Published:2015-05-23
  • About author:*Correspondence: E-mail: zhuowang@sjtu.edu.cn

摘要: Studies on plant response to different CO2 conditions in the levels of both gene transcript and metabolic activity are still very limited so far. Here, by integrating metabolic model with transcriptome data, we construct specific models for Arabidopsis under elevated and low CO2, which uncovered differences in active reactions, increased/decreased fluxes, and post-transcriptional regulation.

Abstract:

Multi-scale investigation from gene transcript level to metabolic activity is important to uncover plant response to environment perturbation. Here we integrated a genome-scale constraint-based metabolic model with transcriptome data to explore Arabidopsis thaliana response to both elevated and low CO2 conditions. The four condition-specific models from low to high CO2 concentrations show differences in active reaction sets, enriched pathways for increased/decreased fluxes, and putative post-transcriptional regulation, which indicates that condition-specific models are necessary to reflect physiological metabolic states. The simulated CO2 fixation flux at different CO2 concentrations is consistent with the measured Assimilation-CO2intercellular curve. Interestingly, we found that reactions in primary metabolism are affected most significantly by CO2 perturbation, whereas secondary metabolic reactions are not influenced a lot. The changes predicted in key pathways are consistent with existing knowledge. Another interesting point is that Arabidopsis is required to make stronger adjustment on metabolism to adapt to the more severe low CO2 stress than elevated CO2. The challenges of identifying post-transcriptional regulation could also be addressed by the integrative model. In conclusion, this innovative application of multi-scale modeling in plants demonstrates potential to uncover the mechanisms of metabolic response to different conditions.

 

Liu L, Shen F, Xin C, Wang Z (2016) Multi-scale modeling of Arabidopsis thaliana response to different CO2 conditions: From gene expression to metabolic flux. J Integr Plant Biol 58: 2–11 doi: 10.1111/jipb.12370

Key words: Metabolic model, gene expression, multi-scale analysis, low/elevated CO2, post-transcriptional regulation

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