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Sub-optimal temperatures can adversely affect tomato () growth, and K plays an important role in the cold tolerance of plants. However, gene expression and K uptake in tomato in response to sub-optimal temperatures are still not very clear. To address these questions, one cold-tolerant tomato cultivar, Dongnong 722 (T722), and one cold-sensitive cultivar, Dongnong 708 (S708), were exposed to sub-optimal (15/10 °C) and normal temperatures (25/18 °C), and the differences in growth, K uptake characteristics and global gene expressions were investigated. The results showed that compared to S708, T722 exhibited lower reduction in plant growth rate, the whole plant K amount and K net uptake rate, and T722 also had higher peroxidase activity and lower K efflux rate under sub-optimal temperature conditions. RNA-seq analysis showed that a total of 1476 and 2188 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) responding to sub-optimal temperature were identified in S708 and T722 roots, respectively. Functional classification revealed that most DEGs were involved in "plant hormone signal transduction", "phenylpropanoid biosynthesis", "sulfur metabolism" and "cytochrome P450". The genes that were significantly up-regulated only in T722 were involved in the "phenylpropanoid biosynthesis" and "plant hormone signal transduction" pathways. Moreover, we also found that sub-optimal temperature inhibited the expression of gene coding for K transporter SIHAK5 in both cultivars, but decreased the expression of gene coding for K channel AKT1 only in S708. Overall, our results revealed the cold response genes in tomato roots, and provided a foundation for further investigation of mechanism involved in K uptake in tomato under sub-optimal temperatures.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants9010065 | DOI Listing |
Plant Physiol Biochem
August 2025
Laboratory of Cyanobacterial Systematics and Stress Biology, Department of Botany, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India. Electronic address:
Thermophilic cyanobacteria are primary producers in hot springs, thriving near the upper thermal limits of oxygenic photosynthesis and having wide temperature tolerance. Although thermophilic cyanobacteria have immense ecological and biotechnological significance, comprehensive studies on their temperature acclimation mechanisms, particularly under sub-optimal conditions, are limited. In the above context, Mastigocladus sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Food Microbiol
November 2025
Departamento de Ingeniería Agronómica, Instituto de Biotecnología Vegetal, Universidad Politécnica de Cartagena, Paseo Alfonso XIII, 48, 30203 Cartagena, Spain. Electronic address:
The variability in the bacterial stress response has received plenty of attention during the last years, partly due to its relevance to microbial risk assessment. Although the microbial response is affected by numerous variability sources, previous studies focused mostly on strain variability (inherent differences between strains of the same bacterial species) under optimal growth conditions. Here, we analyze a variability source relatively unexplored within microbial risk assessment: stress response variability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell Environ
August 2025
Department of Biological Sciences, Seed Biology and Technology Group, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, UK.
Temperature sensing to adjust developmental rates and phenological responses to different climatic environments is critical for plant survival. Population-based thermal-time threshold models predict linear relationships between temperature and, for example, seed germination rates (speed), but the mechanisms are not known. Here, we used an integrative approach into the molecular biomechanical mechanisms underpinning a thermal-time model by combining Lepidium sativum micropylar endosperm (CAP) and radicle transcriptome analysis at defined heat units (generated by different time-temperature combinations) with corresponding CAP biomechanics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
Department of Biodiversity and Conservation Biology, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa.
Global warming is driving contraction of species' ranges through migration and mortality at their warm edge. However, for most species more subtle, sub-lethal changes in performance will be a more ubiquitous response to the Anthropocene. It has been suggested that reduction in body size will be a universal response to warming for cold-water species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Pharmacol
July 2025
School of Applied Sciences, University of Huddersfield, Huddersfield, United Kingdom.
Background: Chemotherapy-induced alopecia (CIA) is a distressing side-effect of cancer treatment. Scalp cooling remains the only available method to mitigate CIA, but its effectiveness varies amongst patients. We previously reported that the cytoprotective effects of cooling are temperature dependent.
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