The Effect of Cold Stress on the Root‐Specific Lipidome of Two Wheat Varieties with Contrasting Cold Tolerance

Bo Eng Cheong*, Dingyi Yu, Federico Martinez‐seidel, William Wing Ho Ho, Thusitha W.T. Rupasinghe, Rudy Dolferus, Ute Roessner

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Complex glycerolipidome analysis of wheat upon low temperature stress has been re-ported for above‐ground tissues only. There are no reports on the effects of cold stress on the root lipidome nor on tissue‐specific responses of cold stress wheat roots. This study aims to investigate the changes of lipid profiles in the different developmental zones of the seedling roots of two wheat varieties with contrasting cold tolerance exposed to chilling and freezing temperatures. We analyzed 273 lipid species derived from 21 lipid classes using a targeted profiling approach based on MS/MS data acquired from schedule parallel reaction monitoring assays. For both the tolerant Young and sensitive Wyalkatchem species, cold stress increased the phosphatidylcholine and phos-phatidylethanolamine compositions, but decreased the monohexosyl ceramide compositions in the root zones. We show that the difference between the two varieties with contrasting cold tolerance could be attributed to the change in the individual lipid species, rather than the fluctuation of the whole lipid classes. The outcomes gained from this study may advance our understanding of the mechanisms of wheat adaptation to cold and contribute to wheat breeding for the improvement of cold‐tolerance.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1364
Number of pages29
JournalPlants
Volume11
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2022

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