Genome-wide association mapping reveals that specific and pleiotropic regulatory mechanisms fine-tune central metabolism and growth in arabidopsis

  • Corina M. Fusari
  • , Rik Kooke
  • , Martin A. Lauxmann
  • , Maria Grazia Annunziata
  • , Beatrice Enke
  • , Melanie Hoehne
  • , Nicole Krohn
  • , Frank F.M. Becker
  • , Armin Schlereth
  • , Ronan Sulpice
  • , Mark Stitt
  • , Joost J.B. Keurentjes

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Articlepeer-review

29 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Central metabolism is a coordinated network that is regulated at multiple levels by resource availability and by environmental and developmental cues. Its genetic architecture has been investigated by mapping metabolite quantitative trait loci (QTL). A more direct approach is to identify enzyme activity QTL, which distinguishes between cis-QTL in structural genes encoding enzymes and regulatory trans-QTL. Using genome-wide association studies, we mapped QTL for 24 enzyme activities, nine metabolites, three structural components, and biomass in Arabidopsis thaliana. We detected strong cis-QTL for five enzyme activities. A cis-QTL for UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase activity in the UGP1 promoter is maintained through balancing selection. Variation in acid invertase activity reflects multiple evolutionary events in the promoter and coding region of VAC-INV. cis-QTL were also detected for ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, fumarase, and phosphoglucose isomerase activity. We detected many trans-QTL, including transcription factors, E3 ligases, protein targeting components, and protein kinases, and validated some by knockout analysis. trans-QTL are more frequent but tend to have smaller individual effects than cis-QTL. We detected many colocalized QTL, including a multitrait QTL on chromosome 4 that affects six enzyme activities, three metabolites, protein, and biomass. These traits are coordinately modified by different ACCELERATED CELL DEATH6 alleles, revealing a trade-off between metabolism and defense against biotic stress.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2349-2373
Number of pages25
JournalPlant Cell
Volume29
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2017

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