Cadmium and copper-induced metabolic and proteomic changes in the root tip during early maize growth.
Carolina Lucila MatayoshiOdalis Maholi Jiménez GuamanMarcos Leopoldo EstesoMicaela PavoniMartín AránLiliana Beatriz PenaSusana Mabel GallegoPublished in: Biometals : an international journal on the role of metal ions in biology, biochemistry, and medicine (2023)
In this study, the metabolic adjustments performed by maize (Zea mays L.) seminal roots exposed to 25 µM Cd 2+ or 25 µM Cu 2+ at pre-emergence are compared, focusing on the proteomic changes after metal exposure. Root width was increased, and root length was decreased after 72 h of metal treatment. Both metals induced H 2 O 2 accumulation and lipid peroxidation in the root tip. These changes were accompanied by increases in lipoxygenase activity and 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal content. NMR spectroscopy revealed that the abundance of 38 water-soluble metabolites was significantly modified by Cd and Cu exposure; this set of metabolites comprised carboxylic acids, amino acids, carbohydrates, and unidentified phenolic compounds. Linoleic acid content significantly decreased in Cu-treated samples. The total amount of proteins detected in maize root apexes was 2,171. Gene ontology enrichment analysis of the differentially accumulated proteins was performed to detect pathways probably affected by metal additions. Both metals altered redox homeostasis, up-regulated oxylipins biosynthetic process, and shifted metabolism towards the oxidative pentose-phosphate in the root apexes. However, the methionine salvage pathway appears as a key metabolic module only under Cd stress. The integrative analysis carried out in this study suggests that most molecular features behind the reprogramming of maize root tips to cope with cadmium and copper toxicity are common, but some are not.