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AI-summarized plant biology research papers from bioRxiv

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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

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

MYB59 is linked to natural variation of water use associated with warmer temperatures in Arabidopsis thaliana

Authors: Ferguson, J. N., Brendel, O., Bechtold, U.

Date: 2025-02-28 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.02.27.640580

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study surveyed vegetative water use and life‑history traits across Arabidopsis thaliana ecotypes in both controlled and outdoor environments to assess how climatic history shapes water‑use strategies. Trait‑climate correlations and genome‑wide association analyses uncovered that ecotypes from warmer regions exhibit higher water use, and identified MYB59 as a key gene whose temperature‑linked alleles affect water consumption, a finding validated using myb59 mutants. These results indicate that temperature‑driven adaptive differentiation partly explains intraspecific water‑use variation.

water-use variation Arabidopsis thaliana climate adaptation GWAS MYB59
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