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Myo-inositol and beyond – Emerging networks under stress

Version 2 2024-03-12, 19:03
Version 1 2023-10-19, 17:14
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 19:03 authored by Ravi ValluruRavi Valluru, Wim Van den Ende

Myo-inositol is a versatile compound that generates diversified derivatives upon phosphorylation by lipid-dependent and -independent pathways. Phosphatidylinositols form one such group of myo-inositol derivatives that act both as membrane structural lipid molecules and as signals. The significance of these compounds lies in their dual functions as signals as well as key metabolites under stress. Several stress- and non-stress related pathways regulated by phosphatidylinositol isoforms and associated enzymes, kinases and phosphatases, appear to function in parallel to coordinatively adapt growth and stress responses in plants. Recent evidence also postulates their crucial roles in nuclear functions as they interact with the key players of chromatin structure, yet other nuclear functions remain largely unknown. Phosphatidylinositol monophosphate 5-kinase interacts with and represses a cytosolic neutral invertase, a key enzyme of sugar metabolism suggesting a crosstalk between lipid and sugar signaling. Besides phosphatidylinositol, myo-inositol derived galactinol and associated raffinose-family oligosaccharides are emerging as antioxidants and putative signaling compounds too. Importantly, myo-inositol polyphosphate 5-phosphatase (5PTase) acts, depending on sugar status, as a positive or negative regulator of a global energy sensor, SnRK1. This implies that both myo-inositol- and sugar-derived (e.g. trehalose 6-phosphate) molecules form part of a broad regulatory network with SnRK1 as the central regulator. Recently, it was shown that the transcription factor bZIP11 also takes part in this network. Moreover, a functional coordination between neutral invertase and hexokinase is emerging as a sweet network that contributes to oxidative stress homeostasis in plants. In this review, we focus on myo-inositol, its direct and more downstream derivatives (galactinol, raffinose), and the contribution of their associated networks to plant stress tolerance.

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln Institute for Agri-Food Technology (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Plant Science

Volume

181

Issue

4

Pages/Article Number

387-400

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

0168-9452

Date Submitted

2020-10-27

Date Accepted

2011-07-11

Date of First Publication

2011-08-03

Date of Final Publication

2011-10-31

ePrints ID

42737

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