The study examined molecular responses in grapevine leaves with and without esca symptoms, using metabolite profiling, RNA‑seq and whole‑genome bisulfite sequencing. Metabolic and transcriptomic changes were confined to symptomatic leaves and linked to local DNA‑methylation alterations, while asymptomatic leaves showed distinct but overlapping methylation patterns, some present before symptoms, indicating potential epigenetic biomarkers for early disease detection.
The study identifies GyrB3 as a novel nuclear factor that interacts with histone deacetylases to regulate transposable element silencing in plants, acting as a suppressor of IBM1 deficiency–induced epigenetic defects. Loss of GyrB3 reduces DNA methylation and increases H3 acetylation at TEs, demonstrating the importance of histone deacetylation for genome stability.
The study examined gene expression, DNA methylation, and small RNA profiles in a Citrus hybrid (C. reticulata × C. australasica) using haplotype‑resolved subgenome assemblies, revealing allele‑specific expression and asymmetric CHH methylation that correlated with increased transcription and 24‑nt siRNA accumulation at promoters. This unconventional association suggests RNA‑directed DNA methylation (RdDM) can activate transcription in citrus fruit and provides a pipeline for epigenomic analysis of complex hybrids relevant to disease resistance breeding.
The study generated a phenotypic dataset for 550 Lactuca accessions, including 20 wild relatives, and applied an iterative two‑step GWAS using a jointly processed SNP set for cultivated lettuce (L. sativa) and its wild progenitor (L. serriola) to dissect trait loci. Known and novel QTLs for anthocyanin accumulation, leaf morphology, and pathogen resistance were identified, with several L. serriola‑specific QTLs revealing unique genetic architectures, underscoring the breeding value of wild lettuce species.
The study examines how the SnRK1 catalytic subunit KIN10 integrates carbon availability with root growth regulation in Arabidopsis thaliana. Loss of KIN10 reduces glucose‑induced inhibition of root elongation and triggers widespread transcriptional reprogramming of metabolic and hormonal pathways, notably affecting auxin and jasmonate signaling under sucrose supplementation. These findings highlight KIN10 as a central hub linking energy status to developmental and environmental cues in roots.
Revisiting the Central Dogma: the distinct roles of genome, methylation, transcription, and translation on protein expression in Arabidopsis thaliana
Authors: Zhong, Z., Bailey, M., Kim, Y.-I., Pesaran-Afsharyan, N., Parker, B., Arathoon, L., Li, X., Rundle, C. A., Behrens, A., Nedialkova, D. D., Slavov, G., Hassani-Pak, K., Lilley, K. S., Theodoulou, F. L., Mott, R.
The study combined long‑read whole‑genome assembly, multi‑omics profiling (DNA methylation, mRNA, ribosome‑associated transcripts, tRNA abundance, and protein levels) in two Arabidopsis thaliana accessions to evaluate how genomic information propagates through the Central Dogma. Codon usage in gene sequences emerged as the strongest predictor of both mRNA and protein abundance, while methylation, tRNA levels, and ribosome‑associated transcripts contributed little additional information under stable conditions.
The study inoculated a range of fern species with diverse microbes, revealing varied disease responses including non‑host and specific resistance, with Pteris vittata showing the broadest pathogen compatibility. Bioinformatic genome mining uncovered a rich repertoire of fern immune receptors, including numerous RLKs/RLPs and a novel class of NLRs (disN‑NLR), suggesting conserved and unique components of plant immunity in ferns.
Impaired methyl recycling induces substantial shifts in sulfur utilization in Arabidopsis
Authors: Tremblay, B. J.-M., Adeel, S. A., Saechao, M., Dong, Y., Andrianasolo, E., Steele, J. M., Traa, A., Yogadasan, N., Waduwara-Jayabahu, I., Katzenback, B. A., Hell, R., Wirtz, M., Moffatt, B. A.
Reduced activity of methylthioadenosine (MTA) nucleosidase causes MTA over‑accumulation in reproductive tissues, leading to lowered cysteine, methionine, and S‑adenosylmethionine levels and altered sulfur and energy metabolism. These metabolic disturbances trigger misregulation of cell‑cycle progression, widespread down‑regulation of developmental genes, and genome‑wide changes in DNA methylation patterns, highlighting the extensive role of MTA recycling in plant growth and methyl‑index maintenance.
Arabidopsis REM transcription factors and GDE1 shape the DNA methylation landscape through the recruitment of RNA Polymerase IV transcription complexes.
Authors: Wu, Z., Xue, Y., Wang, S., Shih, Y.-H., Zhong, Z., Feng, S., Draper, J., Lu, A., Sha, J., Li, L., Wohlschlegel, J., Wu, K., Jacobsen, S. E.
The study identifies four Arabidopsis REM transcription factors (VDD, VAL, REM12, REM13) that bind specific DNA sequences and, together with GDE1, recruit RNA polymerase IV to produce 24‑nt siRNAs that direct DNA methylation at designated loci. Loss of GDE1 causes Pol IV complexes to relocalize to sites bound by REM8, indicating that REM proteins provide sequence‑specific cues for epigenetic patterning.
The study reveals that a set of REPRODUCTIVE MERISTEM (REM) transcription factors, termed RIMs, are essential for directing RNA‑directed DNA methylation (RdDM) to CLSY3 targets in a sex‑specific manner in Arabidopsis reproductive tissues. Disruption of RIM DNA‑binding domains or their target motifs abolishes RdDM at these loci, demonstrating that genetic cues can guide de novo methylation patterns.