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Article|05 Mar 2025|OPEN
Plant resistance inducer AMHA enhances antioxidant capacities to promote cold tolerance by regulating the upgrade of glutathione S-transferase in tea plant
Xuejin Chen1 , Ning Zhou1 , Lisha Yu1 , Zhaolan Han1 , Yanjing Guo1 , Salome Njeri Ndombi1 , Huan Zhang1 , Jie Jiang1 , Yu Duan1 , Zhongwei Zou2 , Yuanchun Ma1 , Xujun Zhu1 , Shiguo Chen1 , and Wanping Fang,1 ,
1Tea Science Research Institute, Weed Research Laboratory, Binjiang Campus, Nanjing Agricultural University, No. 555, Binjiang Avenue, Pukou District, Nanjing, Jiangsu Province, China
2Department of Biology, Wilfrid Laurier University, 75 University Avenue West, Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5, Canada
*Corresponding author. E-mail: chenshg@njau.edu.cn,fangwp@njau.edu.cn

Horticulture Research 12,
Article number: uhaf073 (2025)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhaf073
Views: 1798

Received: 06 Jan 2025
Accepted: 25 Feb 2025
Published online: 05 Mar 2025

Abstract

Plant resistance inducers represent an alternative strategy that mitigate stress-induced damage in plants. Previously, 2-amino-3-methylhexanoic acid (AMHA), a novel natural plant resistance inducer, was shown to significantly bolster cold tolerance, thermotolerance, and pathogen resistance in plants. However, the intricate mechanisms underlying AMHA’s response to cold stress remain elusive. Thus, we investigated the physiological and transcriptomic analyses of AMHA pretreatment on tea plant to determine its substantial role of AMHA under cold stress. The results showed that pretreatment with 100 nM AMHA effectively mitigated the detrimental effects of cold stress on photosynthesis and growth. Furthermore, differentially expressed genes were identified through RNA-seq during pretreatment, cold stress, and 2 days of recovery. These genes were mainly enriched in pathways related to flavonoid/anthocyanin, carotenoid, and ascorbic acid-glutathione (AsA-GSH) cycle, including GST (encoding glutathione S-transferase). Potential regulatory relationships between the identified genes and transcription factors were also established. Antisense oligodeoxynucleotide-silencing and overexpression experiments revealed that CsGSTU7 enhances cold resistance by maintaining redox homeostasis. In conclusion, our study suggests that antioxidant-related signaling molecules play a critical role in the signaling cascades and transcriptional regulation mediating AMHA-induced cold-stress resistance in tea plant.