Integrative Analyses of Metabolome and Transcriptome Reveal Scion–Stock Asymmetry Reduction and Shift of Sugar Metabolism During Graft Junction Formation in Malus Domestica (‘Hanfu’) Homograft
Wenting Huang, Shengyuan Wang, Chong Mao, Ling Xiang, Xiao Zhang, Feng Jiang, Yuqin Cheng, Tianzhong Li

TL;DR
This study explores how sugar metabolism changes during graft healing in apple trees, revealing key phases and the role of carbohydrates in successful grafting.
Contribution
The study identifies specific sugar metabolism-related genes and metabolites involved in graft junction formation in apple homografts.
Findings
Graft healing occurs in two phases: callus proliferation and vascular bundle reconnection.
Sugar biosynthesis genes are highly expressed in the early phase, while sugar consumption genes are activated later.
Exogenous sugars like sucrose and raffinose enhance vascular bundle reconnection during graft healing.
Abstract
Grafting is widely used as a breeding method to enhance productivity and resilience. However, the mechanisms of graft healing remain poorly understood. In this study, we performed Malus domestica (‘Hanfu’) homograft and observed morphological and anatomical changes during the healing process in the graft junction within 40 days after grafting (DAG). The results showed that the healing process was divided into two phases: 0–20 days (callus proliferation phase) and 20–40 days (vascular bundle reconnection phase). During the early stage (20 DAG), gene expression exhibited asymmetry between the scion and rootstock, whereas synchronization occurred in the late stage (40 DAG). Transcriptomic and metabolomic analyses of the scion and rootstock during these two critical phases identified that differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were enriched in “Carbon fixation by Calvin cycle” and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant Disease Management Techniques · Plant tissue culture and regeneration · Plant Pathogens and Fungal Diseases
