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Arabidopsis transcriptomic analysis reveals cesium inhibition of root growth involves abscisic acid signaling. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The report highlights the role of abscisic acid (ABA) signaling in post-germination growth under cesium (Cs) stress, distinct from potassium (K) deficiency.
  • Research using RNA-sequencing on Arabidopsis roots indicates that Cs stress activates unique gene expressions that do not completely overlap with those activated by low K levels.
  • Analysis reveals that under Cs stress, important genes related to translational processes, chromatin regulation, and plant defense are impacted, suggesting that Cs influences multiple pathways including ABA signaling, differently than potassium deficiency does.

Article Abstract

This is the first report on the involvement of abscisic acid signaling in regulating post-germination growth under Cs stress, not related to potassium deficiency. Cesium (Cs) is known to exert toxicity in plants by competition and interference with the transport of potassium (K). However, the precise mechanism of how Cs mediates its damaging effect is still unclear. This fact is mainly attributed to the large effects of lower K uptake in the presence of Cs that shadow other crucial effects by Cs that were not related to K. RNA-seq was conducted on Arabidopsis roots grown to identify putative genes that are functionally involved to investigate the difference between Cs stress and low K stress. Our transcriptome data demonstrated Cs-regulated genes only partially overlap to low K-regulated genes. In addition, the divergent expression trend of High-affinity K Transporter (HAK5) from D4 to D7 growth stage suggested participation of other molecular events besides low K uptake under Cs stress. Potassium deficiency triggers expression level change of the extracellular matrix, transfer/carrier, cell adhesion, calcium-binding, and DNA metabolism genes. Under Cs stress, genes encoding translational proteins, chromatin regulatory proteins, membrane trafficking proteins and defense immunity proteins were found to be primarily regulated. Pathway enrichment and protein network analyses of transcriptome data exhibit that Cs availability are associated with alteration of abscisic acid (ABA) signaling, photosynthesis activities and nitrogen metabolism. The phenotype response of ABA signaling mutants supported the observation and revealed Cs inhibition of root growth involved in ABA signaling pathway. The rather contrary response of loss-of-function mutant of Late Embryogenesis Abundant 7 (LEA7) and Translocator Protein (TSPO) further suggested low K stress and Cs stress may activate different salt tolerance responses. Further investigation on the crosstalk between K transport, signaling, and salt stress-responsive signal transduction will provide a deeper understanding of the mechanisms and molecular regulation underlying Cs toxicity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00425-023-04304-yDOI Listing

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