WeiQi Li

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Name: 李唯奇
Organization: Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences , China
Department: Department of Chemistry
Title: NULL(PhD)

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Co-reporter:Guowei Zheng
BMC Plant Biology 2017 Volume 17( Issue 1) pp:203
Publication Date(Web):15 November 2017
DOI:10.1186/s12870-017-1153-9
γ-rays are high-energy radiation that cause a range of random injuries to plant cells. Most studies on this issue have focused on γ-ray-induced nucleotide damage and the production of reactive oxygen species in cells, so little is known about the glycerolipid metabolism during γ-rays induced membrane injury. Using an ESI-MS/MS-based lipidomic method, we analysed the lipidome changes in wild-type and phospholipase D (PLD)δ- and α1-deficient Arabidopsis after γ-ray treatment. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of PLD-mediated glycerolipid metabolism in γ-ray-induced membrane injury.The ion leakage of Arabidopsis leaves after 2885-Gy γ-ray treatment was less than 10%. High does γ-ray treatment could induce the accumulation of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS). Inhibition of PLDα1 caused severe lipid degradation under γ-ray treatment. γ-ray-induced glycerolipid degradation mostly happened in chloroplastidic lipids, rather than extraplastidic ones. The levels of lysophosphatidylcholine (lysoPC) and lysophosphatidylethanolamine (lysoPE) were maintained in the WS ecotypes during γ-ray treatments, while increased significantly in the Col ecotype treated with 1100 Gy. After 210- and 1100-Gy γ-ray treatments, the level of lysophosphatidylglycerol (lysoPG) decreased significantly in the four genotypes of Arabidopsis.γ-ray-induced membrane injury may occur via an indirect mechanism. The degradation of distinct lipids is not synchronous, and that interconversions among lipids can occur. During γ-ray-induced membrane injury, the degradation of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) may be mediated by PLDζ1 or phospholipase A1. The degradation of phosphatidylglycerol was not mediated by PLA, PLDδ or PLDα1, but by phospholipase C or other PLDs. γ-rays can decrease the double-bond index and increase the acyl chain length in membrane lipids, which may make membranes more rigid and further cause injury in membranes.
Co-reporter:Ting Tang, Peile Liu, Guowei Zheng, Weiqi Li
Phytochemistry 2016 Volume 122() pp:81-90
Publication Date(Web):February 2016
DOI:10.1016/j.phytochem.2016.01.003
•Arabis paniculata is more tolerant to long-term moderate heat than Arabidopsis.•The responses of the two plants to long-term moderate heat presented two phases.•The early phase displayed no significant stress symptoms.•Heat shock proteins were maintained in A. paniculata at the later phase.•A. paniculata synthesised lipids and reduced lipid unsaturation at the early phase.Long-term moderate heat is often experienced by plants and will become even more common in the future due to global warming. However, the responses of plants to this stress have not been characterised. In the present study, growth between Arabidopsis thaliana and its relative Arabis paniculata upon long-term exposure to moderate heat was compared. It was found that the latter was more tolerant than the former, and the patterns of physiological and biochemical responses of both plants presented two phases. The early phase involved no significant visible morphological and physiological changes. It occurred during the first third of the heat treatment and was extended when the stress was attenuated. During the later phase, the plants died or were damaged. Heat shock proteins were dramatically induced at the early phase and gradually decreased at the later phase in A. thaliana. By contrast, the levels were induced and maintained in A. paniculata. Profiling of membrane lipids found that the two plants exhibited opposite patterns of lipid remodelling at the early phase: A. paniculata synthesised phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylinositol and showed a rapid decrease in the degree of lipid unsaturation, while A. thaliana degraded its lipids at the early phase and showed an accelerated degradation at the later phase. These biochemical adjustments during the early phase could favor the thermotolerance of A. paniculata. These results suggest that this species could thus be a model for the study of resistance to long-term moderate heat, through a strategy by which plants can adapt to long-term moderate heat.Arabis paniculata is more tolerant to long-term moderate heat than its relative Arabidopsis thaliana. Comparative lipidomic analysis indicates lipid remodelling at the early phase could favor thermotolerance of A. paniculata.
Co-reporter:Buzhu Yu, Weiqi Li
Phytochemistry 2014 Volume 108() pp:77-86
Publication Date(Web):December 2014
DOI:10.1016/j.phytochem.2014.09.012
•Thellungiella salsuginea shows a high capacity to tolerate osmotic stress.•Extra plastidic lipids are less sensitive to osmotic stress than plastidic lipids.•An adaptive remodelling of plastidic lipids occurs in T. salsuginea.•Remodelling involves the increase in levels and DBI of plastidic lipids.•Remodelling of plastidic lipids may enable T. salsuginea to survive osmotic stress.The remodelling of membrane lipids contributes to the tolerance of plants to stresses, such as freezing and deprivation of phosphorus. However, whether and how this remodelling relates to tolerance of PEG-induced osmotic stress has seldom been reported. Thellungiella salsuginea is a popular extremophile model for studies of stress tolerance. In this study, it was demonstrated that T. salsuginea was more tolerant to PEG-induced osmotic stress than its close relative Arabidopsis thaliana. Lipidomic analysis indicated that plastidic lipids are more sensitive to PEG-induced osmotic stress than extra-plastidic ones in both species, and that the changes in plastidic lipids differed markedly between them. PEG-induced osmotic stress led to a dramatic decrease in levels of plastidic lipids in A. thaliana, whereas the change in plastidic lipid in T. salsuginea involved an adaptive remodelling shortly after the onset of PEG-induced osmotic stress. The two aspects of this remodelling involved increases in (1) the level of plastidic lipids, especially digalactosyl diacylglycerol, and (2) the double bond index of plastidic lipids. These remodelling steps could maintain the integrity and improve the fluidity of plastidic membranes and this may contribute to the PEG-induced osmotic stress tolerance of T. salsuginea.Thellungiella salsuginea is more tolerant to water stress than its close relative Arabidopsis thaliana. Comparative lipidomic analysis indicates that an adaptive remodelling of plastidic lipids occurs in T. salsuginea, when exposed to PEG, and may contribute to its water stress tolerance.
Co-reporter:Jie Zhang;Xudong Zhang;Ruiping Wang
Plant Cell Reports 2014 Volume 33( Issue 5) pp:755-766
Publication Date(Web):2014 May
DOI:10.1007/s00299-014-1590-y
ArabidopsisCa2+-ATPase ACA8 plays a role in sucrose signalling during early seedling development by integrating developmental signals with carbon source availability.Calcium (Ca2+) is an essential signal transduction element in eukaryotic organisms. Changes in the levels of intracellular Ca2+ affect multiple developmental processes in plants, including cell division, polar growth, and organogenesis. Here, we report that the plasma-membrane-localised Arabidopsis Ca2+-ATPase ACA8 plays a role in sucrose signalling during early seedling development. Disruption of the ACA8 gene elevated the expression of genes that encode transporters for Ca2+ efflux. The seedlings that carried a T-DNA insertion mutation in ACA8 experienced water stress during early development. This response was unrelated to inadequate osmoregulatory responses and was most likely caused by disruption of cell membrane integrity and severe ion leakage. In addition, aca8-1 seedlings displayed a significant decline in photosynthetic performance and arrested root growth after removal of sucrose from the growth medium. The two phenomena resulted from impaired photosynthesis, reduced cell proliferation in the root meristem and the sucrose control of cell-cycle events. All of the stress-response phenotypes were rescued when expression of ACA8 was restored in aca8-1 mutant. Taken together, our results indicate that ACA8-mediated Ca2+ signalling contributes to modulate early seedling development and coordinates root development with nutrient availability.
Co-reporter:Guowei Zheng;Yanxia jia;Xu Zhao;Fujuan Zhang;Shihong Luo;Shenghong Li
Chemoecology 2012 Volume 22( Issue 2) pp:131-138
Publication Date(Web):2012 June
DOI:10.1007/s00049-012-0105-y
A phytochemical study of the invasive Eupatorium adenophorum indicated that the plant was rich in a phenolic compound o-coumaric acid (or 2-hydroxycoumaric acid). Biological investigations with the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana and crop plants showed that o-coumaric acid strongly inhibited seed germination, plant growth and root elongation, reduced the photosynthesis in old leaves, and induced the root cell death and the expression of genes related to senescence, oxidative stress, and systemic acquired resistance. The phytotoxic effects of o-coumaric acid exhibit selectivity between under- and above-ground parts of test plants and between E. adenophorum and other plants. These results indicate that o-coumaric acid is a potent toxin that might play an important role in the competition of E. adenophorum with its neighboring plants during its invasion and establishment.
Co-reporter:Mulan Wang, Yunmei Shen, Faqing Tao, Shengchao Yang, Weiqi Li
Plant Diversity (June 2016) Volume 38(Issue 3) pp:156-162
Publication Date(Web):1 June 2016
DOI:10.1016/j.pld.2016.05.006
The composition of membrane lipids is sensitive to environmental stresses. Submergence is a type of stress often encountered by plants. However, how the molecular species of membrane lipids respond to submergence has not yet been characterised. In this study, we used a lipidomic approach to profile the molecular species of membrane lipids in whole plants of Arabidopsis thaliana that were completely submerged for three days. The plants survived one day of submergence, after which, we found that the total membrane lipids were only subtly decreased, showing significant decreases of monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) and an increase of phosphatidic acid (PA); however, the basic lipid composition was retained. In contrast, three days of submergence caused plants to die, and the membranes deteriorated via the rapid loss of 96% of lipid content together with a 229% increase in PA. The turnover of molecular species from PG and MGDG to PA indicated that submergence-induced lipid changes occurred through PA-mediated degradation. In addition, molecular species of extraplastidic PG degraded sooner than plastidic ones, lyso-phospholipids exhibited various patterns of change, and the double-bond index (DBI) remained unchanged until membrane deterioration. Our results revealed the unique changes of membrane lipids upon submergence and suggested that the major cause of the massive lipid degradation could be anoxia.
Dotriacontenoic acid, (Z)-
(2S)-1,2-di-O-linolenoyl-3-O-(alpha-galactopyranosyl-(1->6)-O-beta-galactopyranosyl)glycerol
(2Z,4Z,6Z)-hexadeca-2,4,6-trienoic acid
trans-Vaccenic acid
3-(2-Hydroxyphenyl)acrylic acid
chlorophyll B from spinach
Chlorophyll,paste
Tetratriacontahexaenoicacid, (Z,Z,Z,Z,Z,Z)- (9CI)