Muthan, B., Wang, J., Welti, R., Kosma, D., Yu, L., Deo, B., Khatiwada, S., Vulavala, Childs, K., Xu, C., Durrett, T., Sanjaya, S. 2024, Mechanisms of Spirodela polyrhiza tolerance to FGD wastewater-induced heavy-metal stress: Lipidomics, transcriptomics, and functional validation, Journal of Hazardous Materials

Highlights

  • Treatment with flue gas desulfurization (FGD) wastewater alters lipids in duckweed.
  • FGD wastewater treatment increases 18:3 polyunsaturated triacylglycerol levels.
  • The transcription factor gene WRINKLED3 (SpWRI3) is upregulated by FGD wastewater.
  • Ectopic SpWRI3 expression increases tolerance to FGD wastewater in Arabidopsis.

Abstract

Unlike terrestrial angiosperm plants, the freshwater aquatic angiosperm duckweed (Spirodela polyrhiza) grows directly in water and has distinct responses to heavy-metal stress. Plantlets accumulate metabolites, including lipids and carbohydrates, under heavy-metal stress, but how they balance metabolite levels is unclear, and the gene networks that mediate heavy-metal stress responses remain unknown. Here, we show that heavy-metal stress induced by flue gas desulfurization (FGD) wastewater reduces chlorophyll contents, inhibits growth, reduces membrane lipid biosynthesis, and stimulates membrane lipid degradation in S. polyrhiza, leading to triacylglycerol and carbohydrate accumulation. In FGD wastewater–treated plantlets, the degraded products of monogalactosyldiacylglycerol, primarily polyunsaturated fatty acids (18:3), were incorporated into triacylglycerols. Genes involved in early fatty acid biosynthesis, β-oxidation, and lipid degradation were upregulated while genes involved in cuticular wax biosynthesis were downregulated by treatment. The transcription factor gene WRINKLED3 (SpWRI3) was upregulated in FGD wastewater–treated plantlets, and its ectopic expression increased tolerance to FGD wastewater in transgenic Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Transgenic Arabidopsis plants showed enhanced glutathione and lower malondialdehyde contents under stress, suggesting that SpWRI3 functions in S. polyrhiza tolerance of FGD wastewater–induced heavy-metal stress. These results provide a basis for improving heavy metal–stress tolerance in plants for industrial applications.

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