4.6 Article

Gene Expression Profiles Suggest a Better Cold Acclimation of Polyploids in the Alpine Species Ranunculus kuepferi (Ranunculaceae)

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12111818

Keywords

alpine plants; cold stress; DNA methylation; gene expression; Gene Set Enrichment Analysis; geographical parthenogenesis; polyploidy; Ranunculus kuepferi

Funding

  1. German Science Foundation Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG [Ho4395/1-2]
  2. Ursula Hofmann Stiftung of the Universitatsbund Gottingen
  3. Open Access Publication Funds of Goettingen University

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Alpine habitats are influenced by harsh abiotic conditions and cold climates, with temperature stress impacting gene expression in both diploid and autotetraploid alpine plants. Tetraploids exhibit better acclimation to cold conditions, enabling colonization in colder climatic areas of the Alps. Epigenetic regulation plays a role in the response to temperature stress in perennial alpine plants.
Alpine habitats are shaped by harsh abiotic conditions and cold climates. Temperature stress can affect phenotypic plasticity, reproduction, and epigenetic profiles, which may affect acclimation and adaptation. Distribution patterns suggest that polyploidy seems to be advantageous under cold conditions. Nevertheless, whether temperature stress can induce gene expression changes in different cytotypes, and how the response is initialized through gene set pathways and epigenetic control remain vague for non-model plants. The perennial alpine plant Ranunculus kuepferi was used to investigate the effect of cold stress on gene expression profiles. Diploid and autotetraploid individuals were exposed to cold and warm conditions in climate growth chambers and analyzed via transcriptome sequencing and qRT-PCR. Overall, cold stress changed gene expression profiles of both cytotypes and induced cold acclimation. Diploids changed more gene set pathways than tetraploids, and suppressed pathways involved in ion/cation homeostasis. Tetraploids mostly activated gene set pathways related to cell wall and plasma membrane. An epigenetic background for gene regulation in response to temperature conditions is indicated. Results suggest that perennial alpine plants can respond to temperature extremes via altered gene expression. Tetraploids are better acclimated to cold conditions, enabling them to colonize colder climatic areas in the Alps.

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