Transgenerational effects of stress on reproduction strategy in the mixed mating plant Lamium amplexicaule.

BMC Plant Biol

Department of Molecular Biology and Ecology of Plants, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, 6997801, Israel.

Published: August 2024

Background: The theory of Condition Dependent Sex predicts that - everything else being equal - less fit individuals would outcross at higher rates compared with fitter ones. Here we used the mixed mating plant Lamium amplexicaule, capable of producing both self-pollinating closed flowers (CL), alongside open flowers (CH) that allow cross pollination to test it. We investigated the effects of abiotic stress - salt solution irrigation - on the flowering patterns of plants and their offspring. We monitored several flowering and vegetative parameters, including the number and distribution of flowers, CH fraction, and plant size.

Results: We found that stressed plants show an increased tendency for self-pollination and a deficit in floral and vegetative development. However, when parentally primed, stressed plants show a milder response. Un-stressed offspring of stressed parents show reversed responses and exhibit an increased tendency to outcross, and improve floral and vegetative development.

Conclusions: In summary, we found that stress affects the reproduction strategy in the plants that experienced the stress and in subsequent offspring through F2 generation. Our results provide experimental evidence supporting a transgenerational extension to the theories of fitness associate sex and dispersal, where an individual's tendency for sex and dispersal may depend on the stress experienced by its parents.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11340105PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12870-024-05458-xDOI Listing

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