Recovery from water stress affects grape leaf petiole transcriptome
0301 basic medicine
Time Factors
Vapor Pressure
Embolism
Down-Regulation
Aquaporins
Abscisic acid
03 medical and health sciences
Aquaporins; Abscisic acid; Drought; Embolism; Microarrays; Transpiration; Vitis
Gene Expression Regulation, Plant
Stress, Physiological
Vitis
Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis
2. Zero hunger
0303 health sciences
Drought
Dehydration
Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction
Reproducibility of Results
Water
Plant Transpiration
6. Clean water
Droughts
Up-Regulation
Plant Leaves
Plant Stomata
Transcriptome
Abscisic Acid
DOI:
10.1007/s00425-011-1581-y
Publication Date:
2012-01-12T09:06:06Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
Fast and efficient recovery from water stress is a key determinant of plant adaptation to changing meteorological conditions modulating transpiration, i.e. air temperature and humidity. We analysed transcriptomic responses during rehydration after water stress in grapevine leaf petioles, where embolism formation and repair commonly take place, and where metabolic changes related to embolism recovery are expected to be particularly important. We compared gene expression of recovering plants with irrigated controls, upon high and low transpiration conditions, using cDNA microarrays. In parallel, we assessed the daily dynamics of water relations, embolism formation and repair, and leaf abscisic acid concentration. In recovering plants, the most affected gene categories were secondary metabolism, including genes linked to flavonoid biosynthesis; sugar metabolism and transport, and several aquaporin genes. The physiological dynamics of recovery were lower and the number of differentially expressed probes was much lower upon low transpiration than found in actively transpiring grapevines, suggesting the existence of a more intense metabolic reorganization upon high transpiration conditions and of a signal eliciting these responses. In plants recovering under high transpiration, abscisic acid concentrations significantly increased, and, in parallel, transcripts linked to abscisic acid metabolism and signalling (ABA-8'-hydroxylase, serine-threonine kinases, RD22 proteins) were upregulated; a trend that was not observed upon low transpiration. Our results show that recovery from water stress elicits complex transcriptomic responses in grapevine. The increase observed in abscisic acid cellular levels could represent a signal triggering the activation of responses to rehydration after stress.
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