Transcriptome analysis of tea (Camellia sinensis) leaves in response to ammonium starvation and recovery

Front Plant Sci. 2022 Aug 30:13:963269. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2022.963269. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

The tea plant is a kind of ammonium-preferring crop, but the mechanism whereby ammonium (NH4 +) regulate its growth is not well understood. The current study focused on the effects of NH4 + on tea plants. Transcriptomic analysis was performed to investigate the early- and late-stage NH4 + deprivation and resupply in tea plants shoots. Through short- and long-term NH4 + deficiency, the dynamic response to NH4 + stress was investigated. The most significant effects of NH4 + deficiency were found to be on photosynthesis and gene ontology (GO) enrichment varied with the length of NH4 + deprivation. Enriched KEGG pathways were also different when NH4 + was resupplied at different concentrations which may indicate reasons for tolerance of high NH4 + concentration. Using weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA), modules related to significant tea components, tea polyphenols and free amino acids, were identified. Hence, NH4 + could be regarded as a signaling molecule with the response of catechins shown to be higher than that of amino acids. The current work represents a comprehensive transcriptomic analysis of plant responses to NH4 + and reveals many potential genes regulated by NH4 + in tea plants. Such findings may lead to improvements in nitrogen efficiency of tea plants.

Keywords: RNA-sequencing; WGCNA; ammonium; nitrogen; tea plants; transcriptome.