Root growth promotion by Penicillium melinii: mechanistic insights and agricultural applications
Authors: Gutierrez-Manso, L., Devesa-Aranguren, I., Conesa, C. M., Monteoliva-Garcia, G., Gonzalez-Sayer, S., Lozano-Enguita, A., Blasio, F., Ugena, L., Nolasco, J., Vazquez-Mora, A., Levy, C. C. B., Ariel Otero, E., Fernandez-Calvo, P., Moreno-Risueno, M. A., petrik, I., Pencik, A., Reguera, M., Gonzalez-Bodi, S., Huerta-Cepas, J., Sacristan, S., del Pozo, J. C., Cabrera, J.
The study characterizes the endophytic fungus Penicillium melinii, isolated from Arabidopsis thaliana roots, as a plant‑growth‑promoting agent that enhances root architecture and biomass across Arabidopsis, quinoa, and tomato. Integrated phenotypic, transcriptomic, and hormonal analyses reveal that the fungus stimulates auxin‑related pathways and modest stress responses, leading to increased tomato yield in field trials, underscoring its value as a model for root development and a sustainable biostimulant.
The study used Weighted Gene Correlation Network Analysis (WGCNA) and GENIE3 to construct co‑expression modules and gene regulatory networks (GRNs) in barley subjected to Fusarium head blight and drought stress. Integration of these approaches highlighted overlapping regulatory patterns, pinpointing WRKY transcription factors as central to FHB response, while bHLH and NAC family members showed stress‑specific roles. Promoter motif enrichment further validated predicted TF‑target interactions, offering candidate regulators for future functional validation.
A comprehensive multi‑environment trial of 437 maize testcross hybrids derived from 38 MLN‑tolerant lines and 29 testers identified additive genetic effects as the primary driver of grain yield, disease resistance, and drought tolerance. Strong general combining ability and specific combining ability patterns were uncovered, with top hybrids delivering up to 5.75 t ha⁻¹ under MLN pressure while maintaining high performance under optimum and drought conditions. The study provides a framework for selecting elite parents and exploiting both additive and non‑additive effects to develop resilient maize hybrids for sub‑Saharan Africa.
The authors used computational simulations of plant cellular metabolism under historical atmospheric conditions to demonstrate that reduced CO₂ and increased aridity can drive the evolutionary transition from C₃ to CAM photosynthesis. Their results suggest that while future elevated CO₂ may favor a reversion to C₃-like behavior, drought consistently promotes CAM regardless of CO₂ or temperature, and a minimum O₂ level is required for nocturnal respiration in CAM.
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.
The study demonstrates that salinity stress induces a photomorphogenic‑like response in dark‑grown Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings, resulting in reduced apical hook curvature and impaired soil emergence. This phenotype is linked to disrupted asymmetric epidermal cell elongation, decreased auxin signaling and PIN3 abundance on the hook’s concave side, repression of BBX28 expression, and loss of a spatial COP1 gradient, highlighting spatial regulation as a key factor in stress‑affected seedling development.
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.
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.
SPOROCYTELESS/NOZZLE acts together with MADS-domain transcription factors to regulate an auxin-dependent network controlling the Megaspore Mother Cell development
Authors: Cavalleri, A., Astori, C., Manrique, S., Bruzzaniti, G., Smaczniak, C., Mizzotti, C., Ruiu, A., Spano, M., Movilli, A., Gregis, V., Xu, X., Kaufmann, K., Colombo, L.
The study elucidates the SPL/NZZ‑dependent regulatory pathway governing megaspore mother cell (MMC) differentiation, revealing that SPL/NZZ directly targets genes and interacts with ovule‑identity MADS‑domain transcription factor complexes. Integration of multi‑omics data with genetic complementation and mutant analyses uncovers an auxin‑dependent downstream network that drives MMC formation.
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.
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.
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.