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DNA methylation mediates transcriptional stability and transposon-driven trans-regulation under drought in wheat

Authors: Reynolds, I. J., Barratt, L. J., Harper, A. L.

Date: 2025-12-05 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.64898/2025.12.04.692301

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Triticum aestivum

AI Summary

The study used paired whole‑genome bisulphite sequencing and RNA‑seq on wheat landraces to investigate how DNA methylation patterns change during drought stress, revealing antagonistic trends across cytosine contexts and a key demethylation role for ROS1a family members. Gene‑body methylation correlated positively with expression but negatively with stress‑responsive changes, while drought‑induced hyper‑methylation of specific transposable elements, especially the RLX_famc9 LTR retrotransposon, appears to modulate downstream gene regulation via siRNA precursors.

drought stress DNA methylation Triticum aestivum ROS1a demethylase transposable elements

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

Ethylene signal-driven plant-multitrophic synergy boosts crop performance

Authors: Baer, M., Zhong, Y., Yu, B., Tian, T., He, X., Gu, L., Huang, X., Gallina, E., Metzen, I. E., Bucher, M., Song, R., Gutjahr, C., SU, Z., Moya, Y., von Wiren, N., Zhang, L., Yuan, L., Shi, Y., Wang, S., Qi, W., Baer, M., Zhao, Z., Li, C., Li, X., Hochholdinger, F., Yu, P.

Date: 2025-11-29 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.11.28.690471

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Zea mays

AI Summary

The study uncovers how arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi induce lateral root formation in maize by activating ethylene‑responsive transcription factors (ERFs) that regulate pericycle cell division and reshape flavonoid metabolism, lowering inhibitory flavonols. It also shows that the rhizobacterium Massilia collaborates with AM fungi, degrading flavonoids and supplying auxin, thereby creating an integrated ethylene‑flavonoid‑microbe signaling network that can be harnessed to improve nutrient uptake and crop sustainability.

arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi lateral root development ethylene‑responsive transcription factors flavonoid metabolism Zea mays

Transcriptome and hormone regulations shape drought stress-dependent Fusarium Head Blight susceptibility in different barley genotypes

Authors: Hoheneder, F., Steidele, C. E., Gigl, M., Dawid, C., Hueckelhoven, R.

Date: 2025-11-25 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.11.23.689882

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Hordeum vulgare

AI Summary

Four barley genotypes were examined under simultaneous Fusarium culmorum infection and drought, revealing genotype-dependent Fusarium Head Blight severity and largely additive transcriptomic responses dominated by drought. Co‑expression and hormone profiling linked ABA and auxin to stress‑specific gene modules, and a multiple linear regression model accurately predicted combined‑stress gene expression from single‑stress data, suggesting modular regulation.

Fusarium Head Blight drought stress barley hormone profiling transcriptome analysis

The mRNA covalent modification dihydrouridine regulates transcript turnover and photosynthetic capacity during plant abiotic stress

Authors: Yu, L., Melandri, G., Dittrich, A. C., Calleja, S., Rozzi, B., Ganguly, D. R., Palos, K., Srinivasan, A., Brewer, E. K., Fischer, H., Obata, T., Elgawad, H. A., Beemster, G. T. S., Henderson, R., Garcia, C. D., Zhang, X., Stern, D., Eveland, A., Schroeder, S. J., Skirycz, A., Lyons, E., Arnold, E. A., Gregory, B. D., Nelson, A. D. L., Pauli, D.

Date: 2025-11-24 · Version: 3
DOI: 10.1101/2025.01.17.633510

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study integrates multi-omics data from six Sorghum bicolor accessions under field drought to link RNA covalent modifications (RCMs) with photosynthetic performance, identifying the enzyme SbDUS2 that produces dihydrouridine (DHU) on transcripts. Loss‑of‑function dus2 mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana reveal that DHU deficiency leads to hyperstability of photosynthesis‑related mRNAs, impairing germination, development, and stress‑induced CO2 assimilation. The authors propose DHU as a post‑transcriptional mark that promotes rapid mRNA turnover during abiotic stress, enhancing plant resilience.

RNA covalent modifications dihydrouridine (DHU) drought stress photosynthesis RNA stability

Immunovisualization of spatial changes in leaves and root tissue associated with drought stress in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)

Authors: Leszczuk, A., Kutyrieva-Nowak, N., Skrzypek, T.

Date: 2025-10-07 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.10.06.680837

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: General

AI Summary

The study employed immunofluorescence labeling and fluorescence intensity quantification to examine tissue-specific cellular modifications in plants under drought stress, revealing targeted alterations in proteoglycans, polysaccharides, and AGPs in leaves and roots. These findings highlight the importance of in planta analyses for accurately capturing stress-induced structural changes.

drought stress immunofluorescence labeling proteoglycans arabinogalactan proteins (AGP) tissue-specific adaptation

KATANIN promotes cell elongation and division to generate proper cell numbers in maize organs

Authors: Martinez, S. E., Lau, K. H., Allsman, L. A., Irahola, C., Habib, C., Diaz, I. Y., Ceballos, I., Panteris, E., Bommert, P., Wright, A. J., Weil, C., Rasmussen, C.

Date: 2025-10-06 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.10.05.680529

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Zea mays

AI Summary

The study identifies two maize genes, Discordia3a and Discordia3b, that encode the microtubule‑severing protein KATANIN. Loss‑of‑function allele combinations reduce microtubule severing, impair cell elongation, delay mitotic entry, and disrupt preprophase band and nuclear positioning, leading to dwarfed, misshapen plants.

KATANIN microtubule severing Zea mays preprophase band cell elongation

Aphid-derived cross-kingdom RNA dynamics underpin maize resistance

Authors: Jiang, S., Zhang, Z., Liu, C., Zhu, Y., Kou, Y., Yang, P., Hu, Z., Wu, J., Wang, Y., Wan, F., Wu, G., Chen, Y.

Date: 2025-09-28 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.09.25.678037

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Zea mays

AI Summary

The study identified lineage-specific long non‑coding RNAs (lncRNAs) from the aphid‑specific Ya gene family in Rhopalosiphum maidis and R. padi, demonstrating that these Ya lncRNAs are secreted into maize, remain stable, and move systemically. RNA interference of Ya genes reduced aphid fecundity, while ectopic expression of Ya lncRNAs in maize enhanced aphid colonization, indicating that Ya lncRNAs act as cross‑kingdom effectors that influence aphid virulence.

aphid long non‑coding RNA cross‑kingdom effectors Zea mays RNA interference

Oxidative stress-induced proteolytic activation of polyphenol oxidase triggers an oxidized flavonoids-mediated stress signaling in Camellia sinensis

Authors: Mohapatra, S., Mishra, A., Godara, R., Bali, S., Twinkle,, Kumar, A., Kumar, R., Kumar, N., Kumar, P., Acharya, V., Dogra, V.

Date: 2025-09-25 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.09.23.677533

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Camellia sinensis

AI Summary

The study discovers that drought stress triggers proteolytic activation of chloroplast‑localized polyphenol oxidase (PPO) in Camellia sinensis, converting catechins into theaflavins that act as signaling molecules to induce an unfolded protein response and IRE1‑bZIP60‑dependent programmed cell death. Germplasm comparison, transcriptomic profiling, virus‑induced silencing, PPO overexpression, and pharmacological feeding experiments demonstrate that this PPO‑theaflavin pathway is a conserved stress sensor across species such as tomato and wheat.

polyphenol oxidase theaflavins unfolded protein response programmed cell death drought stress

Spatial inheritance patterns across maize ears are associated with alleles that reduce pollen fitness

Authors: Ruggiero, D., Bang, M., Leary, M., Flieg, H., Garcia-Lamas, L., Vejlupkova, Z., Megraw, M., Jiang, D., Leiboff, S., Fowler, J. E.

Date: 2025-09-20 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.09.17.676879

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Zea mays

AI Summary

The study used a computer‑vision phenotyping pipeline (EarVision.v2) based on Faster R-CNN to map Ds‑GFP mutant kernels on maize ears and a statistical framework (EarScape) to assess spatial patterns of allele transmission from the apex to the base. They found that alleles causing pollen‑specific transmission defects often show significant spatial biases, whereas Mendelian alleles do not, indicating that reduced pollen fitness can shape the spatial distribution of progeny genotypes in Zea mays.

pollen fitness spatial inheritance Ds‑GFP mutants computer vision phenotyping Zea mays
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