A stress-inducible protein regulates drought tolerance and flowering time in Brachypodium and Arabidopsis.
Sheng YingWolf-Rüdiger ScheiblePeter Knut LundquistPublished in: Plant physiology (2022)
To cope with environmental stresses and ensure maximal reproductive success, plants have developed strategies to adjust the timing of their transition to reproductive growth. This has a substantial impact on the stress resilience of crops and ultimately on agricultural productivity. Here, we report a previously uncharacterized, plant-specific gene family designated as Regulator of Flowering and Stress (RFS). Overexpression of the BdRFS gene in Brachypodium distachyon delayed flowering, increased biomass accumulation, and promoted drought tolerance, whereas CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knockout mutants exhibited opposite phenotypes. A double T-DNA insertional mutant in the two Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) homologs replicated the effects on flowering and water-deprivation seen in the B. distachyon CRISPR knockout lines, highlighting the functional conservation of the family between monocots and dicots. Lipid analysis of B. distachyon and Arabidopsis revealed that digalactosyldiacylglycerol and phosphatidylcholine contents were significantly, and reciprocally, altered in overexpressor and knockout mutants. Importantly, alteration of C16:0-containing phosphatidylcholine, a Flowering Locus T-interacting lipid, associated with flowering phenotype, with elevated levels corresponding to earlier flowering. Co-immunoprecipitation analysis suggested that BdRFS interacts with phospholipase Dα1 as well as several other abscisic acid-related proteins. Furthermore, reduction of C18:3 fatty acids in digalactosyldiacylglycerol corresponded with reduced jasmonic acid metabolites in CRISPR mutants. Collectively, we suggest that stress-inducible RFS proteins represent a regulatory component of lipid metabolism that impacts several agronomic traits of biotechnological importance.
Keyphrases
- arabidopsis thaliana
- cell wall
- crispr cas
- transcription factor
- genome editing
- fatty acid
- genome wide
- wild type
- climate change
- stress induced
- risk assessment
- human health
- ms ms
- gene expression
- wastewater treatment
- heart rate
- cell proliferation
- dna methylation
- social support
- single cell
- cell free
- small molecule
- genome wide association study
- data analysis
- life cycle