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Ground level UV-B (290-315 nm) and UV-A (315-400 nm) radiation regulates multiple aspects of plant growth and development. In a natural environment, UV radiation interacts in a complex manner with other environmental factors (e.g., drought) to regulate plants' morphology, physiology, and growth. To assess the interactive effects of UV radiation and soil drying on plants' secondary metabolites and transcript abundance, we performed a field experiment using two different accessions of Medicago truncatula (F83005-5 French origin and Jemalong A17 Australian origin). Plants were grown for 37 days under long-pass filters to assess the effects of UV short wavelength (290-350 nm, UV) and UV-A long wavelength (350-400 nm, UV-A). Soil-water deficit was induced by not watering half of the plants during the last seven days of the experiment. The two accessions differed in the concentration of flavonoids in the leaf epidermis and in the whole leaf: F83005-5 had higher concentration than Jemalong A17. They also differed in the composition of the flavonoids: a greater number of apigenin derivatives than tricin derivatives in Jemalong A17 and the opposite in F83005-5. Furthermore, UV and soil drying interacted positively to regulate the biosynthesis of flavonoids in Jemalong A17 through an increase in transcript abundance of CHALCONE SYNTHASE (CHS). However, in F83005-5, this enhanced CHS transcript abundance was not detected. Taken together the observed metabolite and gene transcript responses suggest differences in mechanisms for acclimation and stress tolerance between the accessions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s43630-023-00404-6 | DOI Listing |
Plants (Basel)
November 2024
Crop Stress Molecular Biology Laboratory, Heilongjiang Bayi Agricultural University, Daqing 163319, China.
Cell Rep
February 2024
School of Forest, Fisheries, and Geomatics Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA. Electronic address:
Legumes establish a symbiotic relationship with nitrogen-fixing rhizobia by developing nodules. Nodules are modified lateral roots that undergo changes in their cellular development in response to bacteria, but the transcriptional reprogramming that occurs in these root cells remains largely uncharacterized. Here, we describe the cell-type-specific transcriptome response of Medicago truncatula roots to rhizobia during early nodule development in the wild-type genotype Jemalong A17, complemented with a hypernodulating mutant (sunn-4) to expand the cell population responding to infection and subsequent biological inferences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotochem Photobiol Sci
July 2023
Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Program, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, and Viikki Plant Science Center, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Ground level UV-B (290-315 nm) and UV-A (315-400 nm) radiation regulates multiple aspects of plant growth and development. In a natural environment, UV radiation interacts in a complex manner with other environmental factors (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFundam Res
March 2023
Institute for Agricultural Biosciences, Oklahoma State University, 3210 Sam Noble Parkway, Ardmore, OK 73401, United States.
is a chosen model for legumes towards deciphering fundamental legume biology, especially symbiotic nitrogen fixation. Current genomic resources for include a completed whole genome sequence information for R108 and Jemalong A17 accessions along with the sparse draft genome sequences for other 226 accessions. These genomic resources are complemented by the availability of mutant resources such as retrotransposon () insertion mutants in R108 and fast neutron bombardment (FNB) mutants in A17.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
September 2022
Laboratory of Plant-Microbe Interactions and Environment (LIPME), University Toulouse III, INRAE, CNRS, 31326, Castanet-Tolosan Cedex, France.
Rhizobial lipochitooligosaccharidic Nod factors (NFs), specified by nod genes, are the primary determinants of host specificity in the legume-Rhizobia symbiosis. We examined the nodulation ability of Medicago truncatula cv Jemalong A17 and M. truncatula ssp.
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