4.7 Article

Norway spruce deploys tissue-specific responses during acclimation to cold

期刊

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
卷 45, 期 2, 页码 427-445

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.14241

关键词

cold; Norway spruce; transcriptome

资金

  1. Science for Life Laboratory
  2. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
  3. National Genomics Infrastructure - Swedish Research Council
  4. Swedish Research Council [2018-05973]
  5. Berzelii Centre for Forest Biotechnology
  6. Swedish University of Agricultural Science's Trees and Crops for the Future (TC4F) program
  7. HolmenSkog AB

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The conifer-dominated boreal forest is expected to experience warmer winter air temperatures and reduced snow cover depth and duration due to climate change. Norway spruce exhibits unique mechanisms for cold tolerance, utilizing early response transcription factors and showing delayed response compared to Arabidopsis. Regulatory network analysis identified both conserved transcription factors and species-specific responses in Norway spruce cold stress adaptation.
Climate change in the conifer-dominated boreal forest is expected to lead to warmer but more dynamic winter air temperatures, reducing the depth and duration of snow cover and lowering winter soil temperatures. To gain insight into the mechanisms that have enabled conifers to dominate extreme cold environments, we performed genome-wide RNA-Seq analysis from needles and roots of non-dormant two-year Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) H. Karst), and contrasted these response to herbaceous model Arabidopsis We show that the main transcriptional response of Norway spruce needles exposed to cold was delayed relative to Arabidopsis, and this delay was associated with slower development of freezing tolerance. Despite this difference in timing, Norway spruce principally utilizes early response transcription factors (TFs) belonging to the same gene families as Arabidopsis, indicating broad evolutionary conservation of cold response networks. In keeping with their different metabolic and developmental states, needles and root of Norway spruce showed contrasting results. Regulatory network analysis identified both conserved TFs with known roles in cold acclimation (e.g. homologs of ICE1, AKS3, and of the NAC and AP2/ERF superfamilies), but also a root-specific bHLH101 homolog, providing functional insights into cold stress response strategies in Norway spruce.

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