2,3-cAMP treatment mimics stress molecular response in Arabidopsis thaliana

2021 
The role of the RNA degradation product 2,3-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (2,3-cAMP) is poorly understood. Recent studies have identified 2,3-cAMP in plant material and determined its role in stress signaling. The level of 2,3-cAMP increases upon wounding, dark, and heat, and 2,3-cAMP by binding to an RNA-binding protein, Rbp47b, promotes stress granule (SG) assembly. To gain further mechanistic insight into 2,3-cAMP function, we used a multi-omics approach combining transcriptomics, metabolomics, and proteomics to dissect Arabidopsis response to 2,3-cAMP treatment. We demonstrated that 2,3-cAMP is metabolized into adenosine, suggesting that the well-known cyclic nucleotide-adenosine pathway from human cells might also exist in plants. Transcriptomic analysis revealed only minor overlap between 2,3-cAMP- and adenosine-treated plants, suggesting that these molecules act through independent mechanisms. Treatment with 2,3-cAMP changed the levels of hundreds of transcripts, proteins, and metabolites, many previously associated with plant stress responses including protein and RNA degradation products, glucosinolates, chaperones and SG components. Finally, we demonstrated that 2,3-cAMP treatment influences the movement of processing bodies, supporting the role of 2,3-cAMP in the formation and motility of membraneless organelles.
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