Multi-scale characterization of cold response reveals immediate and
long-term impacts on cell physiology up to seed composition
- N. Langlade,
- Leconte Jean M.L.,
- Moroldo Marco,
- N. Blanchet,
- Bindea Gabriela,
- Carrère Sébastien,
- Catrice Olivier,
- Comar Alexis,
- Labadie Marc,
- Marandel Rémy,
- N. Pouilly,
- Tapy Camille,
- Paris Clémence,
- Mirleau-Thébaud Virginie
Abstract
Early sowing can help summer crops escape drought and can mitigate the
impacts of climate change on them, but it exposes them to cold stress
during initial developmental stages, which has both immediate and
long-term effects on development and physiology. To understand how early
night-chilling stress impacts plant development and the yield, we
studied the reference sunflower line XRQ under controlled,
semi-controlled and field conditions. We performed high-throughput
imaging of the whole plant parts and obtained physiological and
transcriptomic data from leaves, hypocotyls and roots. We observed
morphological reductions in early stages under field and controlled
conditions, with a decrease in root development, an increase in reactive
oxygen species content in leaves and changes in lipid composition in
hypocotyls. A long-term increase in leaf chlorophyll suggests a stress
memory mechanism that was supported by transcriptomic induction of
histone coding genes. We highlighted leaf transcriptomes in
cold-acclimation genes such as chaperone, heat shock and late
embryogenesis abundant proteins. We identified genes in hypocotyls
involved in lipid, cutin, suberin and phenylalanine ammonia lyase
biosynthesis and ROS scavenging. This comprehensive study describes new
phenotyping methods and candidate genes to understand phenotypic
plasticity better in response to chilling and study stress memory in
sunflower.19 Feb 2024Submitted to Plant, Cell & Environment 19 Feb 2024Submission Checks Completed
19 Feb 2024Assigned to Editor
20 Feb 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
20 Feb 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned
11 Mar 2024Editorial Decision: Revise Minor
28 Apr 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
28 Apr 2024Editorial Decision: Accept