posted on 2021-04-16, 19:04authored byTianyuan Yang, Yunxia Xie, Xin Lu, Xiaomei Yan, Yan Wang, Jingzhen Ma, Xunmin Cheng, Shijia Lin, Shilai Bao, Xiaochun Wan, William J. Lucas, Zhaoliang Zhang
Shading was thought as an effective
approach to increase theanine
in harvested tea shoots. Previous studies offered conflicting findings,
perhaps since the integration of theanine metabolism and transport
in different tissues was not considered. Theanine is synthesized primarily
in the roots and is then transported, via the vascular system, to
new vegetative tissues. Here, we found that theanine increased in
the stem, was reduced in the leaf, and remained stable in the roots,
under shading conditions. Notably, in tea roots, shading significantly
increased ethylamine and activated the theanine biosynthesis pathway
and theanine transporter genes. Furthermore, shading significantly
increased the expression of theanine transporter genes, CsAAP2/4/5/8, in the stem, while decreasing the expression of CsAAP1/2/4/5/6 in the leaf, in accordance with shading effects on theanine levels
in these tissues. These findings reveal that shading of tea plants
promotes theanine biosynthesis and allocation in different tissues,
processes which appear to involve the theanine biosynthesis pathway
enzymes and AAP family of theanine transporters.