Genetius

AI-summarized plant biology research papers from bioRxiv

View Trends

Latest 12 Papers

Dynamic regulation of protein homeostasis underlies acquiredthermotolerance in Arabidopsis

Authors: Bajaj, M., Allu, A. D., Rao, B. J.

Date: 2025-12-26 · Version: 3
DOI: 10.1101/2023.08.04.552042

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

Thermopriming enhances heat stress tolerance by orchestrating protein maintenance pathways: it activates the heat shock response (HSR) via HSFA1 and the unfolded protein response (UPR) while modulating autophagy to clear damaged proteins. Unprimed seedlings cannot mount these responses, leading to proteostasis collapse, protein aggregation, and death, highlighting the primacy of HSR and protein maintenance over clearance mechanisms.

thermopriming heat shock response unfolded protein response autophagy proteostasis

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

Clathrin-coated vesicles are targeted for selective autophagy during osmotic stress.

Authors: dragwidge, j., Buridan, M., Kraus, J., Kosuth, T., Chambaud, C., Brocard, L., Yperman, K., Mylle, E., Vandorpe, M., Eeckhout, D., De Jaeger, G., Pleskot, R., Bernard, A., Van Damme, D.

Date: 2025-09-17 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.09.16.676479

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study identifies an autophagy pathway that degrades plasma membrane-derived clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs) during hyperosmotic stress, helping maintain membrane tension as cell volume decreases. Using live imaging and correlative microscopy, the authors show that the TPLATE complex subunits AtEH1/Pan1 and AtEH2/Pan1 act as selective autophagy receptors by directly binding ATG8, thereby removing excess membrane under drought or salt conditions.

hyperosmotic stress autophagy clathrin-coated vesicles TPLATE complex plasma membrane tension

Deciphering the role of autophagy under Cd toxicity in Arabidopsis thaliana

Authors: Collado-Arenal, A. M., Perez-Gordillo, F. L., Espinosa, J., Moreno-Diaz, R., Shabala, S., Romero-Puertas, M. C., Sandalio, L. M.

Date: 2025-08-31 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.08.27.672299

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study investigates autophagy’s protective role against cadmium stress in Arabidopsis thaliana by comparing wild-type, atg5 and atg7 autophagy-deficient mutants, and ATG5/ATG7 overexpression lines. Cadmium exposure triggered autophagy, shown by ATG8a-PE accumulation, GFP-ATG8a fluorescence and ATG gene up-regulation, with atg5 mutants displaying heightened Cd sensitivity and disrupted metal ion homeostasis, whereas overexpression had limited impact. Genotype-specific differences between Col-0 and Ws backgrounds were also observed.

cadmium stress autophagy Arabidopsis thaliana ATG5 metal ion homeostasis

Unveiling the molecular identity of plant autophagic compartments: A proteo-lipidomic study in Arabidopsis thaliana

Authors: Lupette, J., Chambaud, C., Buridan, M., Castets, J., Wattelet-Boyer, V., Toboso Moreno, I., Kosuth, T., Yatim, C., Dittrich-Domergue, F., Gros, V., Jouhet, J., Claverol, S., Herice, C., Melser, S., Genva, M., Fouillen, L., Bessoule, J.-J., Domergue, F., Bernard, A.

Date: 2025-08-28 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.08.25.671700

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study introduces a native‑condition method combining cell fractionation and immuno‑isolation to purify autophagic compartments from Arabidopsis, followed by proteomic and lipidomic characterisation of the isolated phagophore membranes. Proteomic profiling identified candidate proteins linked to autophagy, membrane remodeling, vesicular trafficking and lipid metabolism, while lipidomics revealed a predominance of glycerophospholipids, especially phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol, defining the unique composition of plant phagophores.

autophagy phagophore membrane proteomics lipidomics membrane remodeling

A dual component system instructs membrane hydrolysis during the final stages of plant autophagy

Authors: Castets, J., Buridan, M., Toboso Moreno, I., Sanchez de Medina Hernandez, V., Gomez, R. E., Dittrich-Domergue, F., Lupette, J., Chambaud, C., Pascal, S., Ibrahim, T., Bozkurt, T. O., Dagdas, Y., Domergue, F., Joubes, J., Minina, A. E. A., Bernard, A.

Date: 2025-08-02 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.08.01.668046

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study identifies the Arabidopsis phospholipases LCAT3 and LCAT4 as essential components that hydrolyze membranes of autophagic bodies within the vacuole, a critical step for autophagy completion. Double mutants lacking both enzymes accumulate autophagic bodies and display diminished autophagic activity, while in vivo reconstitution shows LCAT3 initiates membrane hydrolysis, facilitating LCAT4’s function.

autophagy phospholipase Arabidopsis thaliana vacuolar lumen LCAT3/LCAT4

Advanced illumination-imaging reveals photosynthesis-triggered pH, ATP and NAD redox signatures across plant cell compartments

Authors: Zheng, K., Elsässer, M., Niemeier, J.-O., Barreto, P., Cislaghi, A. P., Hoang, M., Feitosa-Araujo, E., Wagner, S., Giese, J., Kotnik, F., Martinez, M. d. P., Buchert, F. E., Ugalde, J. M., Armbruster, U., Hippler, M., Meyer, A. J., Kunz, H.-H., Maurino, V. G., Finkemeier, I., Schallenberg-Rüdinger, M., Schwarzländer, M.

Date: 2025-06-21 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.06.16.659786

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The authors established a live‑cell imaging platform that combines confocal microscopy of genetically encoded fluorescent protein biosensors with on‑stage illumination to monitor pH, MgATP²⁻, and NADH/NAD⁺ dynamics during dark‑light transitions in Arabidopsis mesophyll cells. They discovered that photosynthetic proton pumping triggers a stromal alkalinization wave extending to the cytosol and mitochondria, elevates MgATP²⁻ levels, and drives reduction of the NAD pool, with malate dehydrogenase mutants showing altered cytosolic redox even in darkness. This methodological advance enables high‑resolution mapping of photosynthesis‑linked energy physiology across cellular compartments.

photosynthesis fluorescent protein biosensors subcellular pH dynamics MgATP2- signaling NAD redox metabolism

Acclimation of carbon metabolism to a changing environment across a leaf rosette of Arabidopsis thaliana

Authors: Brodsky, V., Kerscher, A., Urban, M., Naegele, T.

Date: 2025-05-03 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.04.29.651223

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study compared photosynthetic performance and carbon metabolism in mature versus immature leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana accessions from different latitudes under standard and low‑temperature/high‑light conditions. Leaf‑specific measurements of Fv/Fm and CO2 assimilation revealed distinct acclimation capacities, and integration of carbohydrate and carboxylic‑acid profiles into a carbon balance model indicated that mature leaves help stabilize metabolism in younger tissue. The authors emphasize the importance of accounting for intra‑rosette heterogeneity to avoid misleading metabolic interpretations.

Arabidopsis thaliana leaf-specific acclimation photosynthesis carbon metabolism carbon balance modeling

The autophagy-related genes AtATG5 and AtATG7 influence reserve mobilisation and responses to ABA during seed germination in Arabidopsis thaliana

Authors: Contreras, E., Sanchez-Vicente, I., Pastor-Mora, E., Aylon-Rodriguez, M., Gonzalez-Ceballos, M., Delgado-Gutierrez, M. A., Lorenzo, O., Vicente-Carbajosa, J., Iglesias-Fernandez, R.

Date: 2025-04-21 · Version: 2
DOI: 10.1101/2024.05.15.593177

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study examines how autophagy-related genes AtATG5 and AtATG7 influence Arabidopsis seed germination and ABA responses, revealing that atg5 and atg7 mutants germinate more slowly and display altered lipid droplet and protein storage vacuole organization. Transcriptomic and immunolocalization analyses show delayed ABI5 decay and a direct interaction between ATG8 and the autophagy machinery, implicating autophagy in seed reserve mobilization via transcription factor turnover.

autophagy Arabidopsis thaliana ABA signaling ATG5/ATG7 ABI5

Root hair lifespan is antagonistically controlled by autophagy and programmed cell death

Authors: Feng, Q., Zhu, S., Wang, X., Liu, Y., Zhao, J., Dagdas, Y., Nowack, M. K.

Date: 2025-03-19 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.03.18.643910

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Arabidopsis thaliana

AI Summary

The study reveals that root hair cells rely on elevated autophagy to extend their lifespan, and that loss-of-function mutations in autophagy genes ATG2, ATG5, or ATG7 trigger premature, cell-autonomous death mediated by NAC transcription factors ANAC046 and ANAC087. This uncovers an antagonistic interaction between autophagy and a developmentally programmed cell death pathway that controls root hair longevity, highlighting a potential target for improving nutrient and water uptake in crops.

root hair longevity autophagy ATG2 ATG5 ATG7 NAC transcription factors programmed cell death
Page 1 of 2 Next