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Mitochondrial Stress Induces Plant Resistance Through Chromatin Changes. | LitMetric

Mitochondrial Stress Induces Plant Resistance Through Chromatin Changes.

Front Plant Sci

Genética Molecular de Plantas, Centro Nacional de Biotecnología, Madrid, Spain.

Published: September 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Plants have a “memory” for past stresses, especially pathogens, which enhances their resistance to future infections, showing great potential for agriculture.
  • A study revealed that inducing mitochondrial stress in plants leads to a specific type of resistance (MS-IR) that is effective both locally and across generations, indicated by epigenetic changes in gene expression.
  • Key mechanisms involve increased positive epigenetic marks and DNA modifications that help transmit this resistance, highlighting mitochondria as crucial in sensing environmental stress and shaping plant responses.

Article Abstract

Plants respond more efficiently when confronted with previous similar stress. In the case of pathogens, this memory of a previous infection confers resistance to future ones, which possesses a high potential for agricultural purposes. Some of the defense elements involved in this resistance phenotype, as well as epigenetic mechanisms participating in the maintenance of the memory, are currently known. However, the intracellular cascade from pathogen perception until the establishment of the epigenetic memory is still unexplored. Here, through the induction of mitochondrial stress by exogenous applications of Antimycin A in plants, we discovered and characterized a role of mitochondrial stress in plant-induced resistance. Mitochondrial stress-induced resistance (MS-IR) is effective locally, systemically, within generation and transgenerationally. Mechanistically, MS-IR seems to be mediated by priming of defense gene transcription caused by epigenetic changes. On one hand, we observed an increment in the deposition of H3K4me3 (a positive epigenetic mark) at the promoter region of the primed genes, and, on the other hand, the DNA (de)methylation machinery seems to be required for the transmission of MS-IR to the following generations. Finally, we observed that MS-IR is broad spectrum, restricting the colonization by pathogens from different kingdoms and lifestyles. Altogether, this evidence positions mitochondria as a prominent organelle in environment sensing, acting as an integrating platform to process external and internal signals, triggering the appropriate response, and inducing the epigenetic memory of the stress to better react against future stressful conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8493246PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.704964DOI Listing

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