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AI-summarized plant biology research papers from bioRxiv

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Latest 20 Papers

Multi-Omics Analysis of Heat Stress-Induced Memory in Arabidopsis

Authors: Thirumlaikumar, V. P. P., Yu, L., Arora, D., Mubeen, U., Wisniewski, A., Walther, D., Giavalisco, P., Alseekh, S., DL Nelson, A., Skirycz, A., Balazadeh, S.

Date: 2025-06-23 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.06.19.660594

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study uses a high‑throughput comparative multi‑omics strategy to profile transcript, metabolite, and protein dynamics in Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings throughout the heat‑stress memory (HSM) phase following acquired thermotolerance. Early recovery stages show rapid transcriptional activation of memory‑related genes, while protein levels stay elevated longer, and distinct metabolite patterns emerge, highlighting temporal layers of the memory process.

heat stress acquired thermotolerance heat stress memory multi-omics Arabidopsis thaliana

Non-Thermal Plasma Activated Water is an Effective Nitrogen Fertilizer Alternative for Arabidopsis thaliana

Authors: Kizer, J. J., Robinson, C. D., Lucas, T., Shannon, S., Hernandez, R., Stapelmann, K., Rojas-Pierce, M.

Date: 2025-06-17 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.06.12.659237

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study compared two plasma‑activated water (PAW) solutions with different H₂O₂ levels, produced by a radio‑frequency glow discharge, on Arabidopsis thaliana growth and stress responses. PAW lacking detectable H₂O₂ promoted seedling growth and induced nitrogen‑assimilation genes, while H₂O₂‑containing PAW did not affect growth but enhanced root performance under heat stress; mature plants fertilized with H₂O₂‑free PAW performed comparably to nitrate controls. These results indicate PAW can replace NO₃⁻ fertilizers provided H₂O₂ levels are carefully managed.

plasma activated water hydrogen peroxide reactive oxygen species nitrogen uptake heat stress

A CRISPR/Cas9-induced restoration of bioluminescence reporter system for single-cell gene expression analysis in plants

Authors: Ueno, R., Ito, S., Oyama, T.

Date: 2025-05-30 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.05.27.656507

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study introduces a CRISPR/Cas9‑based restoration system (CiRBS) that reactivates a disabled luciferase reporter (LUC40Ins26bp) in transgenic Arabidopsis, enabling long‑term single‑cell bioluminescence monitoring. Restoration occurs within 24 h after particle‑bombardment‑mediated CRISPR delivery, with ~7 % of cells regaining luminescence and most restored cells carrying a single correctly edited chromosome, facilitating reliable analysis of cellular gene‑expression heterogeneity.

CRISPR/Cas9 bioluminescence reporter particle bombardment single‑cell gene expression Arabidopsis thaliana

m6A RNA methylation attenuates thermotolerance in Arabidopsis

Authors: Shekhawat, K., Sheikh, A., Nawaz, K., Fatima, A., Alzayed, W., Nagaranjan, A. P., Hirt, H.

Date: 2025-05-23 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.05.22.655480

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study demonstrates that N6‑methyladenosine (m6A) RNA methylation acts as a negative regulator of thermotolerance in Arabidopsis thaliana, with loss of m6A increasing heat‑responsive gene expression and mRNA stability. Heat shock triggers a transient reduction of m6A levels, which is linked to enrichment of the H3K4me3 histone mark at target loci, enhancing transcription of heat shock proteins. These findings reveal a coordinated interplay between RNA methylation and chromatin modifications that fine‑tunes the plant heat stress response.

heat stress m6A RNA methylation thermotolerance Arabidopsis thaliana H3K4me3 histone modification

Integrative analysis of plant responses to a combination of water deficit, heat stress and eCO2 reveals a role for OST1 and SLAH3 in regulating stomatal responses

Authors: Pelaez-Vico, M. A., Sinha, R., Ghani, A., Lopez-Climent, M. F., Joshi, T., Fritschi, F. B., Zandalinas, S. I., Mittler, R.

Date: 2025-05-11 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.05.07.652739

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study examined how Arabidopsis thaliana integrates physiological, genetic, hormonal, and transcriptomic responses to combined water deficit, heat stress, and elevated CO2. Results show that stomatal aperture under these complex stress combinations is governed by a specific set of regulators, including nitric oxide, OPEN STOMATA 1, and the SLAH3 anion channel, distinct from those active under simpler stress conditions. This reveals a hierarchical stomatal stress code that could inform future research on plant resilience to global change.

Global Change Factor combination stomatal aperture regulation Arabidopsis thaliana water deficit heat stress

MLO-mediated Ca2+ influx regulates root hair tip growth in Arabidopsis

Authors: Ogawa, S. T., Zhang, W., Staiger, C. J., Kessler, S. A.

Date: 2025-04-10 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.04.08.647801

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study demonstrates that constitutively active MLO (faNTA) can rescue the fer-4 root‑hair bursting and polarity defects, restoring tip‑focused cytosolic Ca2+ oscillations and ROS accumulation, highlighting a FERONIA‑MLO signaling module that governs Ca2+ influx and ROS production during root‑hair tip growth. Genetic analysis of mlo15-4 further confirms MLO15 as a key regulator of these Ca2+ and ROS dynamics. The findings suggest MLO proteins act downstream of FER to coordinate calcium and ROS signals essential for root‑hair integrity.

root hair tip growth calcium signaling reactive oxygen species FERONIA receptor kinase MLO proteins

Arabidopsis root lipid droplets are hubs for membrane homeostasis under heat stress, and triterpenoid synthesis and storage.

Authors: Scholz, P., Dabisch, J., Clews, A. C., Niemeyer, P. W., Vilchez, A. C., Lim, M. S. S., Sun, S., Hembach, L., Dreier, F., Blersch, K., Preuss, L., Bonin, M., Lesch, E., Iwai, Y., Shimada, T., Eirich, J., Finkemeier, I., Gutbrod, K., Doermann, P., Wang, Y., Mullen, R. T., Ischebeck, T.

Date: 2025-03-26 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.03.24.644787

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study examined how heat stress alters lipid droplet (LD) number and composition in Arabidopsis thaliana roots, revealing degradation of membrane lipids and accumulation of TAGs and LDs. Proteomic and lipidomic analyses of LDs from a specific Arabidopsis mutant identified novel LD-associated proteins, including triterpene biosynthetic enzymes, whose substrates and products also accumulate in LDs, indicating LDs function as both sinks and sources during stress‑induced membrane remodeling and specialized metabolism.

lipid droplets heat stress Arabidopsis thaliana roots triterpene biosynthesis lipidomics

High and low exogenous nitrate concentrations produce distinct calcium signatures in Arabidopsis roots

Authors: Shrivastava, S., Singh, D., Zielinski, R. E., Marshall-Colon, A.

Date: 2025-03-07 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.03.03.641058

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

Using an Arabidopsis line expressing the CBL1‑mRuby2‑GCaMP6s calcium reporter, the study uncovered distinct calcium signatures in intact root tissues when exposed to high (5 mM) and low (0.25 mM) nitrate concentrations. Root hairs displayed prominent calcium waves and spikes, while non‑hair epidermal cells showed asynchronous or absent responses, indicating cell‑type‑specific and nitrate‑concentration‑dependent calcium signaling.

calcium signaling nitrate response Arabidopsis thaliana root hair calcium dynamics GCaMP6s imaging

Production of homozygous deletion mutants targeting fertilization regulator genes through multiplex genome editing

Authors: Yoshimura, A., Seo, Y., Kobayashi, S., Igawa, T.

Date: 2025-03-06 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.02.28.640930

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study applied a CRISPR/Cas9 multiplex guide RNA strategy to delete entire open reading frames of four reproductive genes in Arabidopsis thaliana, achieving homozygous deletions already in the T1 generation with rates of 8.3–30%. Deletion efficiencies correlated with DeepSpCas9 prediction scores, and phenotypic analyses revealed unexpected effects of residual gene fragments on fertilization and seed development.

CRISPR/Cas9 multiplex guide RNAs gene knockout Arabidopsis thaliana fertilization regulators

Arabidopsis PIEZO regulates magnetic field-mediated root growth under blue light

Authors: Ai, P. Z., Jing, Y. W., Man, D., Rui, B. H., Yan, L., Hui, P. N., Yong, X., Wei, G. L., ning, L. C., Long, D. Y.

Date: 2025-02-12 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.02.11.637623

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study shows that the mechanosensitive ion channel PIEZO in Arabidopsis thaliana regulates root elongation in response to magnetic fields and blue light, with mutant plants displaying significantly shorter roots under these conditions. PIEZO expression is up‑regulated by a leaf‑derived blue‑light signal in the presence of a magnetic field, influencing calcium efflux and auxin transport via interactions with PIN3, PIN6 and PIN7, and requiring the blue‑light receptors CRY1 and CRY2. Transcriptome analysis reveals that PIEZO integrates multiple hormonal and microRNA pathways, including miR5648‑5p‑mediated negative regulation, to coordinate these environmental responses.

PIEZO magnetic field blue light auxin transport calcium signaling
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