Current perspectives on the regulatory mechanisms of sucrose accumulation in sugarcane

Sugars transported from leaves (source) to stems (sink) energize cell growth, elongation, and maintenance. which are regulated by a variety of genes. This review reflects progress and prospects in the regulatory mechanism for maximum sucrose accumulation, including the role of sucrose metabolizing e...

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Published in:Heliyon
Main Authors: Faisal Mehdi, Saddia Galani, Kamal Priyananda Wickramasinghe, Peifang Zhao, Xin Lu, Xiuqin Lin, Chaohua Xu, Hongbo Liu, Xujuan Li, Xinlong Liu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024-03-01
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844024033085
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author Faisal Mehdi
Saddia Galani
Kamal Priyananda Wickramasinghe
Peifang Zhao
Xin Lu
Xiuqin Lin
Chaohua Xu
Hongbo Liu
Xujuan Li
Xinlong Liu
author_facet Faisal Mehdi
Saddia Galani
Kamal Priyananda Wickramasinghe
Peifang Zhao
Xin Lu
Xiuqin Lin
Chaohua Xu
Hongbo Liu
Xujuan Li
Xinlong Liu
author_sort Faisal Mehdi
collection DOAJ
container_title Heliyon
description Sugars transported from leaves (source) to stems (sink) energize cell growth, elongation, and maintenance. which are regulated by a variety of genes. This review reflects progress and prospects in the regulatory mechanism for maximum sucrose accumulation, including the role of sucrose metabolizing enzymes, sugar transporters and the elucidation of post-transcriptional control of sucrose-induced regulation of translation (SIRT) in the accumulation of sucrose. The current review suggests that SIRT is emerging as a significant mechanism controlling Scbzip44 activities in response to endogenous sugar signals (via the negative feedback mechanism). Sucrose-controlled upstream open reading frame (SC-uORF) exists at the 5′ leader region of Scbzip44's main ORF, which inhibits sucrose accumulation through post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms. Sucrose transporters (SWEET1a/4a/4b/13c, TST, SUT1, SUT4 and SUT5) are crucial for sucrose translocation from source to sink. Particularly, SWEET13c was found to be a major contributor to the efflux in the transportation of stems. Tonoplast sugar transporters (TSTs), which import sucrose into the vacuole, suggest their tissue-specific role from source to sink. Sucrose cleavage has generally been linked with invertase isozymes, whereas sucrose synthase (SuSy)-catalyzed metabolism has been associated with biosynthetic processes such as UDP-Glc, cellulose, hemicellulose and other polymers. However, other two key sucrose-metabolizing enzymes, such as sucrose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase (S6PP) and sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) isoforms, have been linked with sucrose biosynthesis. These findings suggest that manipulation of genes, such as overexpression of SPS genes and sucrose transporter genes, silencing of the SC-uORF of Scbzip44 (removing the 5′ leader region of the main ORF that is called SIRT-Insensitive) and downregulation of the invertase genes, may lead to maximum sucrose accumulation. This review provides an overview of sugarcane sucrose-regulating systems and baseline information for the development of cultivars with higher sucrose accumulation.
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spelling doaj-art-176c20dbbc094b9ea2de00f69fdb034c2025-08-20T00:53:54ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402024-03-01105e2727710.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e27277Current perspectives on the regulatory mechanisms of sucrose accumulation in sugarcaneFaisal Mehdi0Saddia Galani1Kamal Priyananda Wickramasinghe2Peifang Zhao3Xin Lu4Xiuqin Lin5Chaohua Xu6Hongbo Liu7Xujuan Li8Xinlong Liu9Sugarcane Research Institute, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Yunnan Key Laboratory of Sugarcane Genetic Improvement, Kaiyuan, Yunnan 661699, China; National Key Laboratory for Tropical Crop Breeding, Key Laboratory of Biology and Genetic Resources of Tropical Crops (Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs), Institute of Tropical Bioscience and Biotechnology, Sanya Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences, Haikou 571101, China; Corresponding author. Sugarcane Research Institute, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Yunnan Key Laboratory of Sugarcane Genetic Improvement, Kaiyuan, Yunnan 661699, China.Dr.A. Q. Khan Institute of Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering, University of Karachi, Karachi PakistanSugarcane Research Institute, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Yunnan Key Laboratory of Sugarcane Genetic Improvement, Kaiyuan, Yunnan 661699, China; Sugarcane Research Institute, Uda Walawa, 70190, Sri LankaSugarcane Research Institute, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Yunnan Key Laboratory of Sugarcane Genetic Improvement, Kaiyuan, Yunnan 661699, ChinaSugarcane Research Institute, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Yunnan Key Laboratory of Sugarcane Genetic Improvement, Kaiyuan, Yunnan 661699, ChinaSugarcane Research Institute, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Yunnan Key Laboratory of Sugarcane Genetic Improvement, Kaiyuan, Yunnan 661699, ChinaSugarcane Research Institute, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Yunnan Key Laboratory of Sugarcane Genetic Improvement, Kaiyuan, Yunnan 661699, ChinaSugarcane Research Institute, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Yunnan Key Laboratory of Sugarcane Genetic Improvement, Kaiyuan, Yunnan 661699, ChinaSugarcane Research Institute, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Yunnan Key Laboratory of Sugarcane Genetic Improvement, Kaiyuan, Yunnan 661699, China; Corresponding author.Sugarcane Research Institute, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Yunnan Key Laboratory of Sugarcane Genetic Improvement, Kaiyuan, Yunnan 661699, China; Corresponding author.Sugars transported from leaves (source) to stems (sink) energize cell growth, elongation, and maintenance. which are regulated by a variety of genes. This review reflects progress and prospects in the regulatory mechanism for maximum sucrose accumulation, including the role of sucrose metabolizing enzymes, sugar transporters and the elucidation of post-transcriptional control of sucrose-induced regulation of translation (SIRT) in the accumulation of sucrose. The current review suggests that SIRT is emerging as a significant mechanism controlling Scbzip44 activities in response to endogenous sugar signals (via the negative feedback mechanism). Sucrose-controlled upstream open reading frame (SC-uORF) exists at the 5′ leader region of Scbzip44's main ORF, which inhibits sucrose accumulation through post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms. Sucrose transporters (SWEET1a/4a/4b/13c, TST, SUT1, SUT4 and SUT5) are crucial for sucrose translocation from source to sink. Particularly, SWEET13c was found to be a major contributor to the efflux in the transportation of stems. Tonoplast sugar transporters (TSTs), which import sucrose into the vacuole, suggest their tissue-specific role from source to sink. Sucrose cleavage has generally been linked with invertase isozymes, whereas sucrose synthase (SuSy)-catalyzed metabolism has been associated with biosynthetic processes such as UDP-Glc, cellulose, hemicellulose and other polymers. However, other two key sucrose-metabolizing enzymes, such as sucrose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase (S6PP) and sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) isoforms, have been linked with sucrose biosynthesis. These findings suggest that manipulation of genes, such as overexpression of SPS genes and sucrose transporter genes, silencing of the SC-uORF of Scbzip44 (removing the 5′ leader region of the main ORF that is called SIRT-Insensitive) and downregulation of the invertase genes, may lead to maximum sucrose accumulation. This review provides an overview of sugarcane sucrose-regulating systems and baseline information for the development of cultivars with higher sucrose accumulation.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844024033085Sucrose metabolizing enzymesSource-sink communicationPost-transcriptional factorsSucrose accumulationSugarcane genetic engineering
spellingShingle Faisal Mehdi
Saddia Galani
Kamal Priyananda Wickramasinghe
Peifang Zhao
Xin Lu
Xiuqin Lin
Chaohua Xu
Hongbo Liu
Xujuan Li
Xinlong Liu
Current perspectives on the regulatory mechanisms of sucrose accumulation in sugarcane
Sucrose metabolizing enzymes
Source-sink communication
Post-transcriptional factors
Sucrose accumulation
Sugarcane genetic engineering
title Current perspectives on the regulatory mechanisms of sucrose accumulation in sugarcane
title_full Current perspectives on the regulatory mechanisms of sucrose accumulation in sugarcane
title_fullStr Current perspectives on the regulatory mechanisms of sucrose accumulation in sugarcane
title_full_unstemmed Current perspectives on the regulatory mechanisms of sucrose accumulation in sugarcane
title_short Current perspectives on the regulatory mechanisms of sucrose accumulation in sugarcane
title_sort current perspectives on the regulatory mechanisms of sucrose accumulation in sugarcane
topic Sucrose metabolizing enzymes
Source-sink communication
Post-transcriptional factors
Sucrose accumulation
Sugarcane genetic engineering
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844024033085
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