Protein kinase MeSnRK2.3 positively regulates starch biosynthesis by interacting with the transcription factor MebHLH68 in cassava.
Ke LiYajun LiChen LiuMengtao LiRuxue BaoHaiyan WangChangying ZengXincheng ZhouYinhua ChenWenquan WangXin ChenPublished in: Journal of experimental botany (2024)
Starch biosynthesis involves numerous enzymes and is a crucial metabolic activity in plant storage organs. Sucrose non-fermenting related protein kinase 2 (SnRK2) is an abscisic acid (ABA)-dependent kinase and a significant regulatory enzyme in the ABA signaling pathway. However, whether SnRK2 kinases regulate starch biosynthesis is unclear. In this study, we identified that MeSnRK2.3, an ABA-dependent kinase, was highly expressed in the storage roots of cassava and was induced by ABA. Overexpression of MeSnRK2.3 in cassava significantly increased the starch content in the storage roots and promoted plant growth. MeSnRK2.3 was further found to interact with the cassava basic helix-loop-helix 68 (MebHLH68) transcription factor in vivo and in vitro. MebHLH68 directly bound to the promoters of sucrose synthase 1 (MeSUS1), granule-bound starch synthase I a (MeGBSSIa), and starch-branching enzyme 2.4 (MeSBE2.4), thereby upregulating their transcriptional activities. Additionally, MebHLH68 negatively regulated the transcriptional activity of sucrose phosphate synthase B (MeSPSB). Moreover, phosphorylated MebHLH68 by MeSnRK2.3 up-regulated the transcription activity of MeSBE2.4. These findings demonstrated that the MeSnRK2.3-MebHLH68 module connects the ABA signaling pathway and starch biosynthesis in cassava, thereby providing direct evidence of ABA-mediated participation in the sucrose metabolism and starch biosynthesis pathway.