AI Article Synopsis

  • Plants can remember stress through a "stress legacy" that changes their future traits and those of their offspring due to mechanisms like DNA methylation.
  • The study tested how long changes from drought stress in parent plants affect their clonal offspring by growing them under various conditions and applying a demethylating agent.
  • Results indicated that drought stress influences the traits of offspring for at least 8 weeks, emphasizing the importance of considering stress legacy in ecological research on clonal plants.

Article Abstract

Stress can be remembered by plants in a form of stress legacy that can alter future phenotypes of previously stressed plants and even phenotypes of their offspring. DNA methylation belongs among the mechanisms mediating the stress legacy. It is however not known for how long the stress legacy is carried by plants. If the legacy is long-lasting, it can become maladaptive in situations when parental-offspring environment do not match. We investigated for how long after the last exposure of a parental plant to drought can the phenotype of its clonal offspring be altered. We grew parental plants of three genotypes of for five months either in control conditions or in control conditions that were interrupted with intense drought periods applied for two months in four different time slots. We also treated half of the parental plants with a demethylating agent (5-azacytidine, 5-azaC) to test for the potential role of DNA methylation in the stress memory. Then, we transplanted parental cuttings (ramets) individually to control environment and allowed them to produce offspring ramets for two months. The drought stress experienced by parents affected phenotypes of offspring ramets. The stress legacy resulted in enhanced number of offspring ramets originating from plants that experienced drought stress even 56 days before their transplantation to the control environment. 5-azaC altered transgenerational effects on offspring ramets. We confirmed that drought stress can trigger transgenerational effects in . that is very likely mediated by DNA methylation. Most importantly, the stress legacy in parental plants persisted for at least 8 weeks suggesting that the stress legacy can persist in a clonal plant for relatively long period. We suggest that the stress legacy should be considered in future ecological studies on clonal plants.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9130644PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8959DOI Listing

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