4.6 Article

Endopolyploidy Variation in Wild Barley Seeds across Environmental Gradients in Israel

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12050711

Keywords

Endoreduplication; endosperm; Hordeum vulgare ubsp; spontaneum; seed development; super cycle value

Funding

  1. Czech Science Foundation [18-12197S, 21-02929S, 20-25845Y]
  2. Czech Academy of Sciences
  3. ERDF project Plants as a tool for sustainable global development [CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000827]
  4. COST action [16212]

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The study found that wild barley accessions collected from harsh xeric environments in Israel produce a higher proportion of endoreduplicated nuclei in endosperm tissues. Comparisons between wild and cultivated barley strains revealed a higher level of endopolyploidy in the endosperm of wild barley, accompanied by changes in the timing of major developmental phases. This research provides a new direction connecting spatiotemporal patterns of endoreduplication in barley seeds for potential stress buffering.
Wild barley is abundant, occupying large diversity of sites, ranging from the northern mesic Mediterranean meadows to the southern xeric deserts in Israel. This is also reflected in its wide phenotypic heterogeneity. We investigated the dynamics of DNA content changes in seed tissues in ten wild barley accessions that originated from an environmental gradient in Israel. The flow cytometric measurements were done from the time shortly after pollination up to the dry seeds. We show variation in mitotic cell cycle and endoreduplication dynamics in both diploid seed tissues (represented by seed maternal tissues and embryo) and in the triploid endosperm. We found that wild barley accessions collected at harsher xeric environmental conditions produce higher proportion of endoreduplicated nuclei in endosperm tissues. Also, a comparison of wild and cultivated barley strains revealed a higher endopolyploidy level in the endosperm of wild barley, that is accompanied by temporal changes in the timing of the major developmental phases. In summary, we present a new direction of research focusing on connecting spatiotemporal patterns of endoreduplication in barley seeds and possibly buffering for stress conditions.

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