The study investigates how maternal environmental conditions, specifically temperature and light intensity, influence seed longevity in eight Arabidopsis thaliana natural accessions. Seeds developed under higher temperature (27 °C) and high light showed increased longevity, with transcriptome analysis of the Bor-4 accession revealing dynamic changes in stored mRNAs, including upregulation of antioxidant defenses and raffinose family oligosaccharides. These findings highlight the genotype‑dependent modulation of seed traits by the maternal environment.
The study examined how allelic variation at three barley flowering-time genes (PPD‑H1, ELF3, and PHYC) influences photoperiod response parameters, revealing that ELF3 reduces intrinsic earliness and PhyC‑e lowers photoperiod sensitivity. By testing Near Isogenic Lines and HEB‑25 lines under 16–24 h photoperiods, the authors identified a 20‑h threshold for PPD‑H1 lines and proposed reduced photoperiod regimes (20 h and 16 h) for energy‑efficient speed breeding.
The study investigates the evolutionary shift from archegonial to embryo‑sac reproduction by analyzing transcriptomes of Ginkgo reproductive organs and related species. It reveals that the angiosperm pollen‑tube guidance module MYB98‑CRP‑ECS is active in mature Ginkgo archegonia and that, while egg cell transcription is conserved, changes in the fate of other female gametophyte cells drove the transition, providing a molecular framework for this major reproductive evolution.
The study profiled small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) in barley (Hordeum vulgare) seeds differing in viability after controlled long‑term storage, identifying 85,728 differentially expressed siRNAs associated with seed vigor. Trans‑acting siRNAs displayed distinct temporal patterns during imbibition, and functional analyses linked siRNA targets to key processes such as cytochrome activity, root development, and carbohydrate metabolism, suggesting a role in maintaining metabolic activity during germination.
Post-Domestication selection of MKK3 Shaped Seed Dormancy and End-Use Traits in Barley
Authors: Jorgensen, M. E., Vequaud, D., Wang, Y., Andersen, C. B., Bayer, M., Box, A., Braune, K., Cai, Y., Chen, F., Antonio Cuesta-Seijo, J., Dong, H., Fincher, G. B., Gojkovic, Z., Huang, Z., Jaegle, B., Kale, S. M., Krsticevic, F., Roux, P.-M. L., Lozier, A., Lu, Q., Mascher, M., Murozuka, E., Nakamura, S., Simmelsgaard, M. U., Pedas, P. R., Pin, P., Sato, K., Spannagl, M., Rasmussen, M. W., Russell, J., Schreiber, M., Thomsen, H. C., Tulloch, S., Thomsen, N. W., Voss, C., Skadhauge, B., Stein, N., Waugh, R., Willerslev, E., Dockter, C.
The study demonstrates that in barley (Hordeum vulgare) the MAPK pathway, specifically the MKK3 kinase, controls grain dormancy through a combination of haplotype variation, copy-number changes, and intrinsic kinase activity. Historical selection of particular MKK3 haplotypes correlates with climatic pressures, offering a genetic basis to balance short dormancy with resistance to pre‑harvest sprouting under climate change.
A comparative physiological study of persimmon cultivars with flat (Hiratanenashi) and round (Koushimaru) fruit shapes revealed that differences in cell proliferation, cell shape, and size contribute to shape variation. Principal component analysis of elliptic Fourier descriptors tracked shape changes, while histology and transcriptome profiling identified candidate genes, including a WOX13 homeobox gene, potentially governing fruit shape development.
The study used comparative transcriptomics across Erysimum species to identify two 2‑oxoglutarate‑dependent dioxygenases, CARD5 and CARD6, responsible for the 14β‑ and 21‑hydroxylation steps in cardenolide biosynthesis in Erysimum cheiranthoides. Knockout mutants lacking these genes accumulated pathway intermediates, and transient expression in Nicotiana benthamiana confirmed their enzymatic functions, while structural modeling pinpointed residues linked to neofunctionalization.
Comparative transcriptomics uncovers plant and fungal genetic determinants of mycorrhizal compatibility
Authors: Marques-Galvez, J. E., de Freitas Pereira, M., Nehls, U., Ruytinx, J., Barry, K., Peter, M., Martin, F., Grigoriev, I. V., Veneault-Fourrey, C., Kohler, A.
The study used comparative and de‑novo transcriptomic analyses in poplar to uncover plant and fungal gene regulons that govern ectomycorrhizal (ECM) compatibility, distinguishing general fungal‑sensing responses from ECM‑specific pathways. Key findings include modulation of jasmonic acid‑related defenses, coordinated regulation of secretory and cell‑wall remodeling genes, and dynamic expression of the Common Symbiosis Pathway during early and mature symbiosis stages.
High radiosensitivity in the conifer Norway spruce (Picea abies) due to lesscomprehensive mobilisation of protection and repair responses compared to the radiotolerant Arabidopsis thaliana
Authors: Bhattacharjee, P., Blagojevic, D., Lee, Y., Gillard, G. B., Gronvold, L., Hvidsten, T. R., Sandve, S. R., Lind, O. C., Salbu, B., Brede, D. A., Olsen, J. E.
The study compared early protective, repair, and stress responses to chronic gamma irradiation in the radiosensitive conifer Norway spruce (Picea abies) and the radiotolerant Arabidopsis thaliana. Norway spruce exhibited growth inhibition, mitochondrial damage, and higher DNA damage at low dose rates, while Arabidopsis maintained growth, showed minimal organelle damage, and activated DNA repair and antioxidant genes even at the lowest dose rates. Transcriptomic analysis revealed that the tolerant species mounts a robust transcriptional response at low doses, whereas the sensitive species only responds at much higher doses.
The study used comparative transcriptomics to examine how Fusarium oxysporum isolates with different lifestyles on angiosperms regulate effector genes during infection of the non‑vascular liverwort Marchantia polymorpha. Core effector genes on fast core chromosomes are actively expressed in the bryophyte host, while lineage‑specific effectors linked to angiosperm pathogenicity are silent, and disruption of a compatibility‑associated core effector alters the expression of other core effectors, highlighting conserved fungal gene networks across plant lineages.