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Molecular basis of delayed leaf senescence induced by short-term treatment with low phosphate in rice

Authors: Martin-Cardoso, H., Bundo, M., Garcia-Molina, A., San Segundo, B.

Date: 2026-01-24 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.64898/2026.01.23.701354

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Oryza sativa

AI Summary

The study demonstrates that short‑term low phosphate treatment delays leaf senescence in rice by increasing photosynthetic pigments, enhancing antioxidant enzyme activities, and reducing oxidative damage, whereas high phosphate accelerates senescence. CRISPR/Cas9 editing of MIR827 to lower Pi levels also postpones senescence, while overexpression of MIR827 or MIR399, which raises Pi, speeds it up. Transcriptomic profiling reveals coordinated changes in senescence‑associated and metabolic pathways underlying the low‑phosphate response.

phosphate deficiency leaf senescence Oryza sativa CRISPR/Cas9 transcriptomic analysis

CRK5 preserves antioxidant homeostasis and prevents cell death during dark-induced senescence through inhibiting the salicylic acid signaling pathway

Authors: Kamran, M., Burdiak, P., Rusaczonek, A., Zarrin Ghalami, R., Karpinski, S.

Date: 2026-01-12 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.64898/2026.01.12.698963

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study identifies the cysteine‑rich receptor‑like kinase CRK5 as a negative regulator of salicylic‑acid‑mediated cell death and a positive regulator of antioxidant homeostasis during dark‑induced leaf senescence in Arabidopsis. Loss‑of‑function crk5 mutants display accelerated senescence, elevated ROS and electrolyte leakage, and altered antioxidant enzyme activities, phenotypes that are rescued by suppressing SA biosynthesis or catabolism. Transcriptome analysis reveals extensive deregulation of senescence‑ and redox‑related genes, highlighting CRK5’s central role in coordinating hormonal and oxidative pathways.

dark-induced senescence salicylic acid signaling CRK5 receptor kinase reactive oxygen species antioxidant homeostasis

Features affecting Cas9-Induced Editing Efficiency and Patterns in Tomato: Evidence from a Large CRISPR Dataset

Authors: Cucuy, A., Ben-Tov, D., Melamed-Bessudo, C., Honig, A., Cohen, B. A., Levy, A. A.

Date: 2026-01-07 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.64898/2026.01.06.696182

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Solanum lycopersicum

AI Summary

The study generated a dataset of 420 sgRNAs targeting promoters, exons, and introns of 137 tomato genes in protoplasts, linking editing efficiency to chromatin accessibility, genomic context, and sequence features. Open chromatin sites showed higher editing rates, while transcriptional activity had little effect, and a subset of guides produced near‑complete editing with microhomology‑mediated deletions. Human‑trained prediction models performed poorly, highlighting the need for plant‑specific guide design tools.

CRISPR/Cas9 ATAC-seq chromatin accessibility microhomology‑mediated end joining tomato

Do stomatal movements have a limited dynamic range?

Authors: Muraya, F., Siqueira, J. A., Very, A.-A., Roelfsema, R.

Date: 2025-12-26 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.64898/2025.12.22.695892

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study examined the roles of AtKUP2, AtKUP6, AtKUP8, and GORK potassium transport proteins in guard cell function by performing gas-exchange measurements on mature Arabidopsis leaves. Loss of KUP2/6/8 reduced stomatal conductance, whereas a GORK loss‑of‑function mutant showed increased conductance, yet the magnitude of light‑ and ABA‑induced transpiration changes remained similar across genotypes, suggesting a limited dynamic range for rapid stomatal movements that relies on small ionic osmolytes.

stomatal conductance potassium transporters GORK channel AtKUP2/6/8 Arabidopsis

FLOWERING LOCUS T genes MtFTb1 and MtFTb2 act redundantly to promote flowering under long days in Medicago truncatula

Authors: Perez Santangelo, S., Macknight, R. C.

Date: 2025-12-17 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.64898/2025.12.15.694442

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Medicago truncatula

AI Summary

The study identifies MtFTb1 and MtFTb2 as essential, redundant regulators of long‑day flowering in the legume Medicago truncatula, demonstrating that they are required for up‑regulating MtFTa1 under vernalised long‑day conditions. Using CRISPR/Cas9‑generated single and double mutants, the authors show that double mutants are specifically delayed in flowering under long days while retaining vernalization responsiveness, and transcriptomic analyses reveal that MtFTb1/2 activate MADS‑box genes and other flowering regulators.

flowering time FT genes Medicago truncatula CRISPR/Cas9 long‑day photoperiod

High-frequency sorghum transformation toolkit enhances Cas9 efficiency and expands promoter-editing capability with SpRY

Authors: Shen, J., Aregawi, K., Anwar, S., Miller, T., Groover, E. D., Rajkumar, M., Savage, D. F., Lemaux, P. G.

Date: 2025-12-07 · Version: 2
DOI: 10.1101/2025.01.21.634149

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Sorghum bicolor

AI Summary

The study presents an optimized Agrobacterium-mediated transformation toolkit for Sorghum bicolor that achieves up to 95.7% editing efficiency using CRISPR/Cas9 targeting the SbPDS gene, and demonstrates comparable performance with a PAM‑broadened SpRY variant. This platform enables multiplex genome editing and is positioned for integration of advanced tools such as prime and base editors to accelerate sorghum breeding.

Sorghum bicolor CRISPR/Cas9 Agrobacterium-mediated transformation SpRY (PAM‑flexible Cas9) high-efficiency genome editing

Vacuolar invertase knockout enhances drought tolerance in potato plants

Authors: Roitman, M., Teper-Bamnolker, P., Doron-Faigenboim, A., Sikron, N., Fait, A., Vrobel, O., Tarkowski, P., Moshelion, M., Bocobza, S., Eshel, D.

Date: 2025-12-02 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.64898/2025.12.01.691554

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Solanum tuberosum

AI Summary

CRISPR/Cas9 knockout of the vacuolar invertase gene (StVInv) in potato enhanced drought resilience, with mutants maintaining higher stomatal conductance, transpiration, and photosynthetic efficiency, leading to improved agronomic water-use efficiency and biomass under water limitation. Metabolomic profiling showed accumulation of galactinol and raffinose, while ABA levels were reduced, indicating altered osmoprotective and hormonal responses that support sustained growth during drought.

drought stress vacuo lar invertase knockout CRISPR/Cas9 raffinose family oligosaccharides water-use efficiency

Ca2+-driven nanodomain enrichment and plasma membrane proteome remodelling enable bacterial outer membrane vesicle perception in rice

Authors: Mondal, I., Das, H., Behera, S.

Date: 2025-12-02 · Version: 2
DOI: 10.1101/2025.09.17.676730

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Oryza sativa

AI Summary

The study reveals that rice perceives Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae outer membrane vesicles through a rapid calcium signal that triggers plasma‑membrane nanodomain formation and the re‑organisation of defence‑related proteins, establishing an early immune response. Without this Ca2+ signal, OMVs are not recognized and immunity is weakened.

Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae outer membrane vesicles calcium signaling plasma membrane nanodomains proteomics

Chloroplast-mitochondria synergy modulates responses to iron limitation in two Thalassiosira diatom species

Authors: ANGULO, J., Uwizeye, C., Albanese, P., Menneteau, M., Ravanel, S., Jouneau, P.-H., Finazzi, G., Courtois, F.

Date: 2025-11-29 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.11.28.691171

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Thalassiosira oceanica; Thalassiosira pseudonana

AI Summary

The study compares the iron-poor oceanic diatom Thalassiosira oceanica with the iron-rich coastal species T. pseudonana to uncover how diatoms adapt to low-iron conditions. Using photo‑physiological measurements, proteomic profiling, and focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy, the researchers show that each species remodels chloroplast compartments and exhibits distinct mitochondrial architectures to maintain chloroplast‑mitochondrial coupling under iron limitation.

iron limitation diatoms Thalassiosira chloroplast-mitochondrial coupling proteomics

CLPC2 plays specific roles in CLP complex-mediated regulation of growth, photosynthesis, embryogenesis and response to growth-promoting microbial compounds

Authors: Leal-Lopez, J., Bahaji, A., De Diego, N., Tarkowski, P., Baroja-Fernandez, E., Munoz, F. J., Almagro, G., Perez, C. E., Bastidas-Parrado, L. A., Loperfido, D., Caporalli, E., Ezquer, I., Lopez-Serrano, L., Ferez-Gomez, A., Coca-Ruiz, V., Pulido, P., Morcillo, R. J. L., Pozueta-Romero, J.

Date: 2025-11-28 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.11.25.690394

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study demonstrates that the plastid chaperone CLPC2, but not its paralogue CLPC1, is essential for Arabidopsis responsiveness to microbial volatile compounds and for normal seed and seedling development. Loss of CLPC2 alters the chloroplast proteome, affecting proteins linked to growth, photosynthesis, and embryogenesis, while overexpression of CLPC2 mimics CLPC1 deficiency, highlighting distinct functional roles within the CLP protease complex.

CLPC2 microbial volatile compounds chloroplast CLP protease proteomics Arabidopsis thaliana
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