Melatonin mediates elevated carbon dioxide‐induced photosynthesis and thermotolerance in tomato
Md. Kamrul Hasan, Qufan Xing, Can‐Yu Zhou, Kaixin Wang, Tong Xu, Ping Yang, Zhenyu Qi, Shujun Shao, Golam Jalal Ahammed, Jie Zhou
Abstract
Abstract Increasing carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) promotes photosynthesis and mitigates heat stress‐induced deleterious effects on plants, but the regulatory mechanisms remain largely unknown. Here, we found that tomato ( Solanum lycopersicum L.) plants treated with high atmospheric CO 2 concentrations (600, 800, and 1000 µmol mol −1 ) accumulated increased levels of melatonin ( N ‐acetyl‐5‐methoxy tryptamine) in their leaves and this response is conserved across many plant species, including Arabidopsis, rice, wheat, mustard, cucumber, watermelon, melon, and hot pepper. Elevated CO 2 (eCO 2 ; 800 µmol mol −1 ) caused a 6.8‐fold increase in leaf melatonin content, and eCO 2 ‐induced melatonin biosynthesis preferentially occurred through chloroplast biosynthetic pathways in tomato plants. Crucially, manipulation of endogenous melatonin levels by genetic means affected the eCO 2 ‐induced accumulation of sugar and starch in tomato leaves. Furthermore, net photosynthetic rate, maximum photochemical efficiency of photosystem II, and transcript levels of chloroplast‐ and nuclear‐encoded photosynthetic genes, such as rbcL , rbcS , rbcA , psaD , petB , and atpA , significantly increased in COMT1 overexpressing ( COMT1 ‐OE) tomato plants, but not in melatonin‐deficient comt1 mutants at eCO 2 conditions. While eCO 2 enhanced plant tolerance to heat stress (42°C) in wild‐type and COMT1 ‐OE, melatonin deficiency compromised eCO 2 ‐induced thermotolerance in comt1 plants. The expression of heat shock proteins genes increased in COMT1 ‐OE but not in comt1 plants in response to eCO 2 under heat stress. Further analysis revealed that eCO 2 ‐induced thermotolerance was closely linked to the melatonin‐dependent regulation of reactive oxygen species, redox homeostasis, cellular protein protection, and phytohormone metabolism. This study unveiled a crucial mechanism of elevated CO 2 ‐induced thermotolerance in which melatonin acts as an essential endogenous signaling molecule in tomato plants.