The build-up of osmotic stress responses within the growing root apex using kinematics and RNA-sequencing

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Abstract

Molecular regulation of growth must include spatial and temporal coupling of cell production and cell expansion. The underlying mechanisms, especially under environmental challenge, remain obscure. Spatial patterns of cell processes make the root apex well suited to deciphering stress signaling pathways, and to investigating both processes. Kinematics and RNA-sequencing were used to analyze the immediate growth response of hydroponically grown Populus nigra cuttings submitted to osmotic stress. About 7400 genes and unannotated transcriptionally active regions were differentially expressed between the division and elongation zones. Following the onset of stress, growth decreased sharply, probably due to mechanical effects, before recovering partially. Stress impaired cell expansion over the apex, progressively shortened the elongation zone, and reduced the cell production rate. Changes in gene expression revealed that growth reduction was mediated by a shift in hormone homeostasis. Osmotic stress rapidly elicited auxin, ethylene, and abscisic acid. When growth restabilized, transcriptome remodeling became complex and zone specific, with the deployment of hormone signaling cascades, transcriptional regulators, and stress-responsive genes. Most transcriptional regulations fit growth reduction, but stress also promoted expression of some growth effectors, including aquaporins and expansins. Together, osmotic stress interfered with growth by activating regulatory proteins rather than by repressing the machinery of expansive growth.

Figures

  • Fig. 2. The root apex transcriptome. (A) Hierarchical clustering performed on normalized count-based expression. Gray boxes highlight the main clusters gathering libraries from the division zone and from the elongation zone. The second-order clustering (white) highlights 3 h long osmotic stress libraries. (B) Fold changes in gene expression assessed by RNAsequencing and qPCR. Black and white symbols correspond to annotated genes and uTARs, respectively (Supplementary Fig. S3). (C) Highest GO enrichments in the root apex transcriptome as compared with the P. trichocarpa genome (|Fold-change enrichment| ≥2, corrected P-value <0.05, Blast2GO; Supplementary Table S2).

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Royer, M., Cohen, D., Aubry, N., Vendramin, V., Scalabrin, S., Cattonaro, F., … Hummel, I. (2016). The build-up of osmotic stress responses within the growing root apex using kinematics and RNA-sequencing. Journal of Experimental Botany, 67(21), 5961–5973. https://doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erw350

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