Ethylene- and Shade-Induced Hypocotyl Elongation Share Transcriptome Patterns and Functional Regulators.
Debatosh DasKate R St OngeLaurentius A C J VoesenekRonald PierikRashmi SasidharanPublished in: Plant physiology (2016)
Plants have evolved shoot elongation mechanisms to escape from diverse environmental stresses such as flooding and vegetative shade. The apparent similarity in growth responses suggests a possible convergence of the signaling pathways. Shoot elongation is mediated by passive ethylene accumulating to high concentrations in flooded plant organs and by changes in light quality and quantity under vegetation shade. Here, we study hypocotyl elongation as a proxy for shoot elongation and delineate Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) hypocotyl length kinetics in response to ethylene and shade. Based on these kinetics, we further investigated ethylene- and shade-induced genome-wide gene expression changes in hypocotyls and cotyledons separately. Both treatments induced a more extensive transcriptome reconfiguration in the hypocotyls compared with the cotyledons. Bioinformatics analyses suggested contrasting regulation of growth promotion- and photosynthesis-related genes. These analyses also suggested an induction of auxin, brassinosteroid, and gibberellin signatures and the involvement of several candidate regulators in the elongating hypocotyls. Pharmacological and mutant analyses confirmed the functional involvement of several of these candidate genes and physiological control points in regulating stress-escape responses to different environmental stimuli. We discuss how these signaling networks might be integrated and conclude that plants, when facing different stresses, utilize a conserved set of transcriptionally regulated genes to modulate and fine-tune growth.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- arabidopsis thaliana
- dna methylation
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- drug induced
- signaling pathway
- rna seq
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- copy number
- endothelial cells
- climate change
- single cell
- oxidative stress
- human health
- cell wall
- stress induced
- life cycle
- high resolution
- heat stress
- single molecule