Evolutionary insights into strategy shifts for the safe and effective accumulation of ascorbate in plants

Plants accumulate high concentrations of ascorbate, commonly in their leaves, as a redox buffer. While ascorbate levels have increased during plant evolution, the mechanisms behind this phenomenon are unclear. Moreover, has the increase in ascorbate concentration been achieved without imposing any d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental botany 2024-05, Vol.75 (9), p.2664-2681
Hauptverfasser: Maruta, Takanori, Tanaka, Yasuhiro, Yamamoto, Kojiro, Ishida, Tetsuya, Hamada, Akane, Ishikawa, Takahiro
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container_end_page 2681
container_issue 9
container_start_page 2664
container_title Journal of experimental botany
container_volume 75
creator Maruta, Takanori
Tanaka, Yasuhiro
Yamamoto, Kojiro
Ishida, Tetsuya
Hamada, Akane
Ishikawa, Takahiro
description Plants accumulate high concentrations of ascorbate, commonly in their leaves, as a redox buffer. While ascorbate levels have increased during plant evolution, the mechanisms behind this phenomenon are unclear. Moreover, has the increase in ascorbate concentration been achieved without imposing any detrimental effects on the plants? In this review, we focus on potential transitions in two regulatory mechanisms related to ascorbate biosynthesis and the availability of cellular dehydroascorbate (DHA) during plant evolution. The first transition might be that the trigger for the transcriptional induction of VTC2, which encodes the rate-limiting enzyme in ascorbate biosynthesis, has shifted from oxidative stress (in green algae) to light/photosynthesis (in land plants), probably enabling the continuous accumulation of ascorbate under illumination. This could serve as a preventive system against the unpredictable occurrence of oxidative stress. The second transition might be that DHA-degrading enzymes, which protect cells from the highly reactive DHA in green algae and mosses, have been lost in ferns or flowering plants. Instead, flowering plants may have increased glutathione concentrations to reinforce the DHA reduction capacity, possibly allowing ascorbate accumulation and avoiding the toxicity of DHA. These potential transitions may have contributed to strategies for plants' safe and effective accumulation of ascorbate.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/jxb/erae062
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source Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); MEDLINE
subjects Ascorbic Acid - metabolism
Biological Evolution
Oxidative Stress
Plants - metabolism
title Evolutionary insights into strategy shifts for the safe and effective accumulation of ascorbate in plants
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