| Literature DB >> 35216448 |
Yinglin Du1, Xizhe Fu2, Yiyang Chu1, Peiwen Wu1, Ye Liu1, Lili Ma1, Huiqin Tian1, Benzhong Zhu1.
Abstract
Plant sterols are important components of the cell membrane and lipid rafts, which play a crucial role in various physiological and biochemical processes during development and stress resistance in plants. In recent years, many studies in higher plants have been reported in the biosynthesis pathway of plant sterols, whereas the knowledge about the regulation and accumulation of sterols is not well understood. In this review, we summarize and discuss the recent findings in the field of plant sterols, including their biosynthesis, regulation, functions, as well as the mechanism involved in abiotic stress responses. These studies provide better knowledge on the synthesis and regulation of sterols, and the review also aimed to provide new insights for the global role of sterols, which is liable to benefit future research on the development and abiotic stress tolerance in plant.Entities:
Keywords: biosynthesis; growth and development; plant sterols; regulation; stress responses
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35216448 PMCID: PMC8875669 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23042332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The chemical structure of free sterols and conjugated sterol. R1 at C3 and R2 at C17 determine the diversity of sterols. (1) Tetracyclic skeleton of sterol; R1 determines the type of compound including, (2) free sterol, (3) steryl glucosides, (4) acylated steryl glucosides, (5) steryl esters, (6) steroidal glycoalkaloids. R2 determines the diversity of compounds. For example, the combination of (2) and (7) makes cholesterol (12), the combination of (2) and (8) makes campesterol (13), the combination of (2) and (9) makes β-sitosterol (14), the combination of (2) and (10) makes stigmasterol (15), the combination of (3) and (10) makes stigmasteryl glycose (16), the combination of (4) and (9) makes sitosteryl palmitoyl glucoside (17), the combination of (5) and (9) makes stigmasteryloleate (18), while the combination of (6) and (11) makes α-solanine (19). The differences in the R1 group and R2 group are shown in blue and red, respectively.
Figure 2Biosynthesis pathways of plant sterols. Enzymes of the plant sterols synthesis pathway are marked in blue, the key enzymes that regulate C24-alkyl sterol synthesis are depicted in yellow, major sterols in plants are marked in red, and dotted lines represent multiple reaction steps. Species names are abbreviated as follows: FDFT1, farnesyl-diphosphate farnesyltransferase; SQE, squalene monooxygenase; LAS, lanosterol synthase; CYP51; sterol C-14 demethylase; C14-R, sterol C-14 reductase; SC4DM, sterol C-4 demethylation complex enzymes (include SMO, 4-methyl sterol oxidase; 3β-HSD, 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase; 3KSR, 3-keto sterol reductase) ; 8,7-SI, sterol 8,7 isomerase; C5-SD, sterol C-5 desaturase; 7-DR, 7-dehydrocholesterol; DHCR24, Δ(24)-sterol reductase; CAS, cycloartenol synthase; SMT, sterol C24-methyl transferase; CPI, cyclopropyl sterol isomerase; SSR, sterol side-chain reductase; CYP710A, sterol C-22 desaturase.
Figure 3(a) Phylogeny of the CYP gene superfamily in A. thaliana. The unrooted phylogenetic tree of 81 CYP genes in A. thaliana was constructed by MEGA7.0 with the neighbor-joining (NJ) method. In the phylogenetic tree, CYP710 is marked in blue, CYP51 is marked in red, CYP710 and CYP51 cluster into one clade is marked in yellow. (b) The domain and motif of CYP710 and CYP51 were analyzed by NCBI and MEME, respectively. (c) Expression profile of CYP710 and CYP51 in different tissues of A. thaliana.
The role of sterols in plant responses to a variety of abiotic stress.
| Plant | Related Treatment | Stress Factor | Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 4 °C for 1 and 12 h | Up-regulated the expression of | [ | |
|
| 35 or 21 °C for 40 h | Up-regulated the concentrations of sterols | [ | |
|
| 25 or 35 °C for 1–5 days | Reduced the level of stigmasterol | [ | |
|
| 13 or 23 °C under white light | Reduced the level of the total sterols at 23 °C | [ | |
|
| 2 °C for 4 weeks | Increased acylated sterol glycoside (ASG) content; changes in the ratio of free sterol and ASG | [ | |
|
| 7 ± 1 ℃ for 30 days | Increased the permeability of plant cell membrane; increased ratio of stigmasterol to sitosterol | [ | |
|
| 45 ℃ for 3 and 6 h | Increased fatality rate | [ | |
|
| AtCYP710A1 gene-overexpression | 45 ℃ for 3 and 6 h | Enhanced the heat tolerance and reduced the mortality | [ |
|
| 4 ℃ for 1 and 12 h | Destructed membrane integrity; accumulated reactive oxygen species; increased total sterol content; increased the ratio of C24-methy sterol and C24-ethyl sterol | [ | |
|
| 5 mM MβCD for 12 h | 4 ℃ for 1 and 12 h | Decreased sterol content; aggravated the cold stress injury | [ |
|
| Seeds were soaked with 10 μM sitosterol for 10 h | 10, 25, and 45 ± 3 °C for 14 days | Increased tolerance of tomato plants to both high and low temperature stress | [ |
|
| 400 μM sitosterol, foliar spraying until droplets formed | 35 °C for 28 days | Inhibited the leaf senescence under heat stress; enhanced plant heat tolerance. | [ |
|
| 25 mM NaCl for 8 days | Decreased the content of total sterols by 50%; increased the content of saturated fatty acids | [ | |
|
| 85 mM NaCl for 17–20 days | Decreased the content of total sterol | [ | |
|
| 0, 40 and 80 mM NaCl for 15 days | Decreased the content of sitosterol; increased stigmasterol content | [ | |
|
| 150 mM NaCl for 15 days | Decreased the content of total sterol | [ | |
|
| 0, 170, 340, and 510 mM NaCl for 10 weeks | Decreased sitosterol in response to elevated NaCl. | [ | |
|
| 150 mM NaCl for 21 days | Decreased the content of campesterol and cholesterol; improved salt tolerance | [ | |
|
| 50 and 100 mM NaCl for 4 weeks | Increased the ratio of sterols and phospholipids; enhanced salt tolerance; improved membrane rigidity | [ | |
|
| Overexpressing | 400 mM NaCl for 0, 0.5, 1.5, 3, 6, 9, 24 and 72 h | Decreased the sensitivity of plants to dehydration stress; increased the content of total sterols | [ |
|
| 100 and 200 mM NaCl for 1 week | Increased the level of stigmasterol; enhanced the adaption of the membrane to salt stress | [ | |
|
| seeds were soaked with 200 ppm stigmasterol for 12 h | 0, 100, 150 or 200 mM NaCl for 40 days | Decreased the drastic affect by NaCl; enhanced plant salinity tolerance | [ |
|
| 150 ppm sitosterol | 50, 100 or 200 mM NaCl | Offset the salinity stress damage; improved membrane stability and antioxidant enzyme activity | [ |
|
| UV-B (8.25 lW·cm−2, 16 h) | Increased the content of sitosterol and stigmasterol | [ | |
|
| UV-B (33 lW·cm−2, 4 h) | Increased the content of triterpenoids 4.8-fold | [ | |
|
| UV-B (6.5 kJ·m−2·day−1, 5 days) | No significant influence on the content of sterol | [ | |
|
| UV-B (12.4 kJ·m−2·day−1, 5 days) | No significant influence on the content of sterol | [ | |
|
| UV-B (3.6 kJ·m−2·day−1) | Decreased the content of triterpenoids in leaf; increased triterpenoids levels in root | [ | |
|
| 150 μM sitosterol for 20 days | UV-B (315 ± 20 nm, 6 h per day, 5 days) | Improved the growth of rice plants; enhanced tolerance of rice to UV-B stress | [ |
|
| Water stress for 3, 6, 9 and 12 days | Up-regulated the level of stigmasterol, campesterol, β-sitosterol; decreased the activity of HMGR in rice | [ | |
|
| Five levels of drought stress on seed | Increased the content of plant sterols, especially β-sitosterol; inhibited the oil production of pumpkin seeds | [ | |
|
| Drought stress for 3, 6, 9 and 12 days | Increased the content of both free sterols and sterol ester; improved HMGR activity | [ | |
|
| 1, 8, and 15 days under water deprivation treatment | Increased sterols levels | [ | |
|
| Drought stress for 7 days | Increased the content of cholesterol, putrescine (Put), spermidine (Spd), and spermine (Spm); improved drought tolerance | [ | |
|
| Knock-down of | Drought stress for 7 days | Increased the content of cholesterol, Put, Spd, and Spm; improved drought tolerance | [ |
|
| 120 μM sitosterol for 3 days | Drought stress for 7 days | Enhanced the drought tolerance and total antioxidant capacity. | [ |
|
| 0, 25, 50, 100 mg·L−1 sitosterolapplied to wheat plants foliage | 50% of crop evapotranspiration for 45 days | Offset the damage caused by drought to plants; improved yield. | [ |
The regulation of the transcription factors to the plant sterols synthesis in plants.
| Transcription Factor (TF) | TF Source | Plant | Regulation Type | Structural Gene | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WsWRKY1 |
|
| Positive | [ | |
| WsWRKY1 |
|
| Positive | [ | |
| WsWRKY1 |
|
| Positive |
| [ |
| PqWRKY1 |
|
| Positive | [ | |
| WsMYC2 |
|
| Positive | [ | |
| TwMYC2a/TwMYC2b |
|
| Negative |
| [ |
| ERF4 |
|
| Positive | Nearly all genes of the cholesterol biosynthesis | [ |
Figure 4Role of plant sterols in response to abiotic stress. Under abiotic stress, the structure of the membrane is destroyed, which affects the permeability of the membrane and the activity of the membrane-bound protein, causing the loss of H+. Transcription factors are regulated by corresponding hormone signals to regulate the expression of structural genes of sterol biosynthesis to affect the content of “stress” sterols and ultimately maintain membrane stability.