Metabolomic Profile and Functional State of Oat Plants ( Avena sativa L.) Sown under Low-Temperature Conditions in the Cryolithozone.
Vasiliy V NokhsorovFedor F ProtopopovIgor V SleptsovLidia V PetrovaKlim A PetrovPublished in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Oats are one of the most useful and widespread cereal crops in the world. In permafrost conditions (Central Yakutia), based on metabolic changes in late summer-sown oat plants ( Avena sativa L.), the key processes involved in the cold acclimation of a valuable cereal species were identified. During the onset of low ambient temperatures, metabolites from leaf samples were profiled using gas chromatography with mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and were analyzed using principal component analysis (PCA). A total of 41 metabolites were identified in oat leaves. It was found that acclimation to suboptimal temperatures during the fall period leads to biochemical (accumulation of mono- and disaccharides and decrease in fatty acids and polyols) as well as physiological and biophysical changes (decrease in leaf PRI reflectance indices and chlorophyll a fluorescence). Therefore, the study contributes to a more holistic understanding of oat metabolism under low-temperature cryolithozone stress. It is believed that the analysis of changes in leaf reflection properties and JIP-test parameters of chlorophyll a fluorescence using leaf metabolomic profiling can be used in the selection of valuable varieties of cereal crops to obtain plant fodders with high nutrient contents under conditions of a sharply continental climate.
Keyphrases
- gas chromatography
- mass spectrometry
- energy transfer
- fatty acid
- ms ms
- tandem mass spectrometry
- liquid chromatography
- single molecule
- high resolution mass spectrometry
- air pollution
- particulate matter
- high performance liquid chromatography
- climate change
- high resolution
- capillary electrophoresis
- gas chromatography mass spectrometry
- solid phase extraction
- quantum dots
- stress induced
- simultaneous determination