| Literature DB >> 34281289 |
Md Tahjib-Ul-Arif1,2, Mst Ishrat Zahan3, Md Masudul Karim4, Shahin Imran5, Charles T Hunter6, Md Saiful Islam7, Md Ashik Mia4, Md Abdul Hannan2, Mohammad Saidur Rhaman8, Md Afzal Hossain2, Marian Brestic9,10, Milan Skalicky10, Yoshiyuki Murata1.
Abstract
SeverEntities:
Keywords: aluminum toxicity; antioxidant; citrate; drought stress; heavy metal stress; reactive oxygen species; salinity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34281289 PMCID: PMC8268203 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22137235
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1A simplified model showing the biosynthetic pathway of CA in plant cells. CA biosynthesis occurs in the TCA cycle in the mitochondria or via the Glyoxylate cycle in the glyoxysome. CA is exported to the cytosol where it can remain or be stored in the vacuole. Citric acid/Citrate, CA; oxaloacetate, OAA.
Published effects of abiotic stresses on endogenous CA levels in plants.
| Stress | Treatment | Plant Species | Organ/Tissue | Duration | Endogenous CA Level | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Salinity | 50 to 250 mM NaCl |
| Shoot | 7 days | ↑ | [ |
| 20 and 120 mM NaCl |
| Shoot | 10 days | ↑ | [ | |
| 100 and 200 mM NaCl | Root exudates | 4 weeks | ↑ | [ | ||
| 100 and 200 mM NaCl |
| Root exudates | 4 weeks | ↑ | [ | |
| 25 to 200 mM NaCl |
| Seedling | 5 days | ↑ | [ | |
| Drought | 40, 70, and 100% FC |
| Fruit | 120 days | ↑ | [ |
| Irrigated and dryland |
| Leaf | 108 days | ↑ | [ | |
| Withholding water | Leaf | 16 days | ↑ | [ | ||
| Withholding water |
| Leaf | 10 days | ↑ | [ | |
| −20, −20 to −40, and −40 to −60 kPa |
| Tuber | 42 days | = | [ | |
| Heat | 25/20 °C and 35/30 °C (D/N) |
| Leaf | 28 days | ↑ | [ |
| 22°C and 30 °C (daytime) |
| Tuber | 42 days | = | [ | |
| 20/15 °C and 35/30 °C |
| Leaf | 18 days | = | [ | |
| 30/25 °C and 45/40 °C | Hybrid bermudagrass | Leaf | 18 days | ↑ | [ | |
| 25/20 °C and 35/30 °C (D/N) |
| Leaf | 15 days | ↑ | [ | |
| HMs | 50 µM CdCl2 |
| Root | 24 h | ↑ | [ |
| 0.6 mM CdCl2 |
| Shoot | 7 days | ↑ | [ | |
| 150 μM NiCl2.6H20 |
| Leaf and root | 1 week | ↑ | [ | |
| 50 µM K2Cr2O7 |
| Root exudates | 8 days | ↑ | [ | |
| 100 µM K2Cr2O7 |
| Root exudates | 8 days | ↓ | [ | |
| 100 µM K2Cr2O7 |
| Root exudates | 16 days | ↑ | [ | |
| 50 μM AlCl3 | Root exudates | 12 h | ↑ | [ | ||
| 15 μM AlCl3.6H2O |
| Root exudates | 24 h | ↑ | [ | |
| 50 μM AlCl3 |
| Root exudates | 12 h | ↓ | [ | |
| 30 μM AlCl3 |
| Root exudates | 9 h | ↑ | [ |
↑ CA increase; ↓ CA decrease; = CA unchanged; FC, Field Capacity; D/N, day/night.
Effectiveness of exogenous CA on mediating salinity and drought stress tolerance.
| Plant Species | Stress | CA Treatments and Method of Application | Effects | Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Salt (205, 135, and 35 mM NaCl) | Foliar spray of 2.5 g L−1 potassium citrate | Increased growth, yield, and photosynthetic pigments. Increased TSS, TSP, TPC, FAA, and proline. Enhanced CAT, POX, and SOD activities. | Improved growth and yield but no effects on fiber properties. | [ | |
| Salt (NaCl) | Seed soaking with CA (500 mg L−1) as sildenafil citrate | Increased germination rate. | Improved the tolerance and development of papaya plants in saline environments. | [ | |
| Drought | Spraying of CA (0.5, 1.0, 1.5, and 2 g L−1) | Increased relative water content (RWC) and Chl. Increased plant growth and productivity. | Application of CA at 1.5 g L−1 was most effective for drought alleviation. | [ | |
| Salt (NaCl) (4.2–4.6 dSm−1) | Foliar spray of CA with ascorbic acid and salicylic acid (100 or 200 ppm) | Increased leaf area index, net assimilation rate, growth rate, and photosynthetic pigments. Enhanced CAT, POX, PPO, and PAL activities. Decreased proline and Na+. Increased K+. | Improved tolerance to salinity. | [ | |
| Salt (200 mM NaCl) and alkaline stress (100 mM Na2CO3) | Irrigation with CA (50 mg L−1) | Increased growth and CA exudation. Increased RWC and CO2 assimilation rate. Enhanced MDA content, CAT, APX, and SOD activities. | Improved tolerance to saline and alkaline stress. | [ | |
| Drought | Foliar spray of CA (500 ppm) | Increased growth, number of fruiting branches, number of open bolls per plant, seed index, boll weight, lint percentage, and seed cotton yield. Increased Chl | Reduced drought sensitivity but no significant effects on fiber properties. | [ | |
| Salt | Foliar spray of CA (10 mM) | Increased TPC and proline accumulation. Reduced GSH content. Enhanced SOD activity but decreased CAT, POX, and PAL activities | Improved flower production under salinity condition. | [ | |
| Drought | Spraying of CA (5 mM) | Increased P uptake. Decreased hydrogen peroxide production. | Alleviated drought-induced oxidative stress. | [ | |
| Salt (0.0, 1.6, 3.1, and 6.3 dSm−1) | Foliar spray of CA (0.3 g L−1) | Increased levels of α-pinene, β-bisabolene, monoterpene hydrocarbons (MCH) and oxygenated sesquiterpenes (SCHO). | Improved growth. | [ | |
| Salt (12.50 dSm−1) | Soil application of CA (300 mg L−1) | Increased K, N, and P when added in combination with tomato peel extract. Increased CAT and POX activity when added in combination with banana peel extract. | Banana extract and CA reduced soil salinity. | [ |
Effectiveness of exogenous CA on mediating temperature and alkaline stress tolerance.
| Plant Species | Stress | CA dose | Effects | Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Heat stress: (25/20 °C and 35/30 °C, day/night) in growth chambers | Foliar spraying of CA (0, 0.2, 2, and 20 mM) | Increased growth. Increased Chl content, photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm) and SOD, POX, and CAT activities. Decreased EL and MDA content. Increased expression of heat shock protein genes. | Alleviated growth and physiological damage caused by high temperature | [ |
|
| Heat stress as manipulated by late summer sowing (air temp up to 35 °C) | Spraying of CA (2.5 and 5 g L−1) | Increased yield and fertility of pollen grains. Increased vitamin C content, TSS, minerals. Increased stem thickness, epidermis, phloem and xylem tissues. | Increased yield during late summer | [ |
|
| Cold stress (˂10 °C) | CA (5 mM) in nutrient solution | Increased the number of leaves remaining on plants grown under low-illumination. | Suppressed defoliation | [ |
|
| Alkaline stress (100 mM Na2CO3) | Spraying of CA (50 mg L−1) | Increased growth, relative growth rate, and photosynthesis. Enhanced CAT, SOD, and APX activities. | Increased stress tolerance | [ |
|
| Calcareous yellow soil (pH higher than 8) | CA (40, 80 and 120 mg kg−1 soil) | Increased growth, total biomass, root development, root-shoot ratio, and total root surface area. | Increased seedling growth | [ |
Effectiveness of exogenous CA on mediating HM stress tolerance.
| Plant Species | HM Stress | Treatments | Effects | Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Cu (50 and 100 µM as CuSO4) | CA (2.5 mM) in | Increased plant growth, biomass, Chl content, stomatal conductance, and water use efficiency. Enhanced POX, SOD, CAT, and APX activities. Reduced H2O2, MDA, and EL. | Minimized Cu toxicity and enhanced biomass production. | [ |
|
| Cd (10 and 50 µM as CdCl2) | CA (2.5 mM) in | Enhanced plant growth and biomass, gas exchange activities, and antioxidant enzymes activity. Reduced oxidative stress by reducing H2O2 and MDA production and decreasing EL. | Mitigated Cd stress. | [ |
|
| Cd (50 mg Cd2+ kg−1 dry soil) | CA (20 mmol kg−1 soil) applied in soil | Promoted plant growth, biomass, and antioxidative defense e.g., SOD and POX activity at initial stage. | Slightly reduced Cd stress. | [ |
|
| Cd (0.6 mmol kg−1 soil as CdCl2) | CA (0.6 mmol kg−1 soil) applied in soil | Increased plant height, Chl | Alleviated Cd-induced toxicity. | [ |
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| Cd (0.6 mM) as CdCl2 | Soil treatment with CA | Significantly increased Chl | Alleviated Cd stress. | [ |
|
| Cr (100 and 500 μM) | Irrigated with CA (2.5 and 5.0 mM) | Increased plant growth, biomass, Chl | Improved Cr stress tolerance. | [ |
|
| Cd (0.5 mM Cd and 1.0 mM CdCl2) | CA (0.5 and 1.0 mM) in nutrient solution | Increased plant growth, leaf RWC, and Chl content. Enhanced activities of APX, MDHAR, DHAR, GR, GPX, SOD, and CAT. Reduced oxidative damage. | Enhanced Cd stress tolerance by regulating antioxidant defense. | [ |
| Cr (5, 10 and 20 mg kg−1 dry weight) | CA treatment | Increased plant growth and biomass, Chl, carotenoid, photosynthesis, gas exchange, and soluble proteins. Enhanced activities of antioxidant enzymes. Reduced production of ROS and MDA. | Improved Cr stress tolerance. | [ | |
|
| Mn (50, 100 and 500 μM as MnSO4) | CA (5 mM) in the | Increased shoot length and root number. | Alleviated Mn toxicity and enhanced growth. | [ |
| Germinating pea seeds | Cu (as 200 µM CuCl2) | Irrigated with CA | Reduced oxidative stress. Decreased H2O2, MDA, carbonyl groups, lipid peroxidation, and protein oxidation. | Enhanced growth and reduced stress. | [ |
| Cd as CdCl2 (300 mg kg−1) | Irrigation with CA (0.25, 0.5, 1.0 and 2 g kg−1 soil) | Increased root and shoot length, biomass. Reduced bioaccumulation coefficient and translocation factor. Reduced Cd uptake. | CA | [ | |
|
| Cd (150 mg Cd2+ kg−1 soil) | CA (10 and 20 mmol kg−1 soil) | Increased shoot phenolic acids. Reduced ROS production. | Improved Cd stress tolerance. | [ |
|
| Pb as Pb(NO3)2 (50 and 100 μM) | CA (2.5 mM) in | Increased plant height, root length, leaf growth, fresh and dry weight, Chl content, SPAD values, Pn, E, Gs, and Pn/E. Enhanced SOD, POX, CAT, and APX activities. Prevented lipid membrane damage. Reduced MDA and H2O2 production. | Increased Pb stress tolerance. | [ |
|
| Pb (10 μM as Pb(NO3)2) and As (10 μM as Na2HAsO4) | CA (250 μM) in | Increased Chl | Increased Pb and As tolerance. | [ |
| Roots of | Pb (5 μM) as Pb(NO3)2 | CA (550 μM and 1000 μM) in nutrient culture | Non-significant effect on antioxidant enzyme activities (i.e., SOD, GPX, APX, and GR). | CA did not mitigate Pb toxicity | [ |
|
| Cd (100 µmol L−1 CdCl2) | CA (0, 10, 50, 100, 500 µmol L−1) in solution culture | Increased plant growth and biomass. | Improved Cd stress tolerance | [ |
|
| Cd (20 mg L−1) as Cd(NO3)2. | 5 mM CA in nutrient culture | Enhanced antioxidant enzyme activity. Decreased Cd2+ uptake and accumulation. | Improved Cd stress tolerance | [ |
|
| Cd (50 μmol L−1) as CdCl2·2. | CA (100 μmol L−1) in nutrient solution | Increased biomass, carotenoid, Chl | Reduced stress and enhanced growth, biomass, and photosynthesis. | [ |
|
| Ni as NiSO4 (0.003 mmol L−1) | CA (0.5, 1.0, and 5.0 mmol L−1) in nutrient solution | Reduced Ni uptake but had no effect on Ni translocation. | Reduce stress by reducing Ni uptake. | [ |
|
| Cd (0.6 mM) | Foliar spray of CA (0.6 mM) | Increased plant growth. | Enhanced growth and efficacy of photosynthetic machinery | [ |
| Cr (5, 10, and 20 mg kg−1) | Irrigation with CA (2.5 and 5 mM) | Increased plant growth, Chl, carotenoid, Pn, E, Gs, and water use efficiency. | Increased tolerance to Cr stress. | [ | |
|
| 100 mg kg−1 Pb from Pb(NO3)2 | Root irrigation and foliar spraying of CA (0.2, 1.0, 5.0, and 10.0 mmol L−1) | Increased plant growth and biomass, proline, total Chl, and carotenoid content. Enhanced SOD and POX activities. Reduced Pb content and MDA levels. | Improved tolerance to Pb stress | [ |
| Cd as CdCl2 (25.0 µM) | CA (50.0 µM) in nutrient solution | Increased GSH, Chl, carotenoid, and anthocyanin contents. Decreased Cd content in leaves. | Enhanced Cd tolerance and promoted higher biomass production | [ | |
| 20 µM Cd (added as CdCl2) | Irrigation with CA (10, 50, 100, and 500 µM) | Increased index of tolerance, root and shoot biomass. Decreased Cd uptake, MDA levels, and PCs-SH production in roots. | Reduced bioavailability of Cd. | [ | |
| 100 µM Al in nutrient solution | Foliar spraying with 100 µM of CA | Increased growth. Reduced lipid peroxidation. | Alleviated Al toxicity through roots Al detoxification | [ | |
|
| Pb and Hg (1, 2.5 and 5 mM) | CA (5 mM) in | Increased fresh and dry biomass of root, stem, and leaf. Increased Chl | Improved stress tolerance with increased physiological parameters. | [ |
Figure 2Mechanisms of HM stress tolerance mediated by citric acid (CA). In response to HM-containing soil, (1) plant roots release exudate containing CA whereupon CA can detoxify HMs by forming HM-CA complexes. (2) Moreover, organic acids like CA decrease the rhizosphere pH and cause precipitation of HMs. (3) Sensing of HMs activates genes involved in CA release in the shoot xylem. (4) HMs form HM-CA complexes through ligand exchange reactions with citrate. (5) Complexes of HM-CA, once transferred from xylem to leaf cells through iron regulated/Ferroportin family transporters or ABC transporters, undergo another ligand exchange reaction to reform HM-oxalate complexes which are deposited in the vacuole. (6) HMs are sequestered in the cytosol through phyotochelation and transplanted into tonoplast via transporters.
Figure 3Overview of cellular mechanisms for HM detoxification and stress tolerance involving citric acid (CA). HMs enter cytosol after uptake through anion channels or metal transporters, for example, ZIP (zinc/iron -regulated transporter) family members or NRAMPs (macrophage proteins associated with natural resistance) family members or NIP aquaporin (nodulin-26-like intrinsic proteins of the aquaporin family) etc. Cellular CA functions as high-affinity ligand, chelating HMs in the cytosol and then binding together to form a stable chelation complex via the cytosol ligand exchange reaction. The chelation complex is then transported into the vacuole via vacuolar transporters like ABC (ATP-binding cassette) tonoplast transporter achieving HM sequestration. CA further aids vacuolar compartmentalization or remobilization of HMs by buffering the concentrations of cytosolic HMs, but the precise mechanism remains unclear. HMs induce oxidative stress in cells, leading to the formation of ROS. Exogenous CA enhances antioxidant systems (e.g., glutathione (GSH), superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GPX), etc.) to fine-tune ROS levels and maintain normal cellular activities. High cellular CA also activates alternative oxidase (AOX) and that detoxifies ROS. Exogenous CA also induces osmolyte synthesis (e.g., proline, glycine betaine (GB), etc.) which regulates the osmotic balance and promotes ROS scavenging enzyme gene expression. Finally, CA decreases the pH of the cell and increases the synthesis of total polyphenol compounds (TPC) which directly scavenge ROS.
Examples of transgenic plants overexpressing genes for CA biosynthesis and their phenotypic response to abiotic stresses.
| Gene(s) | Origins | Transgenic Plants | Phenotype | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Citrate Synthase ( |
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| Al stress tolerance | [ |
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| Al stress tolerance | [ | |
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| Tobacco plant | Al stress intolerance | [ |
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| Tobacco cells | Al stress tolerance | [ |
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| Al stress tolerance | [ |
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| Al stress tolerance | [ |
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| Al stress tolerance | [ |
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| Al stress tolerance | [ |
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| Al stress tolerance | [ |
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| Al stress tolerance | [ |
| Mitochondrial Citrate |
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| Al stress tolerance | [ |
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| Al stress tolerance | [ |
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| Alkaline stress tolerance | [ |
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| Alkaline stress tolerance | [ |
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| Fe stress tolerance | [ |
Figure 4Schematic representation of CA metabolism in plants. Citrate derived from the TCA cycle can be converted to acetyl-CoA. Acetyl-CoA carboxylase converts acetyl-CoA to malonyl-CoA, a precursor for fatty acid and jasmonate biosynthesis via the octadecanoid metabolic pathway. Malonyl Co-A also feeds into the mevalonate pathway and provides building blocks of phytohormones (cytokinins, gibberellins, abscisic acid, brassinosteroids, and strigolactones) and vitamins (vitamin K and vitamin A). Oxaloacetate (OAA) can be converted into glucose-6-phosphate via PEP caroxykinase and phosphatases, providing a source of ascorbic acid as well as glucose, sucrose and fructose. 2-oxoglutarate can be converted into glutamate, feeding into GABA and amino acid biosynthesis.