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Evidence of stress imprinting with population‐level differences in two moss species

Plants are often repeatedly exposed to stresses during their lives and have a mechanism called stress imprinting that provides “memories” of stresses they experience and increases their ability to cope with later stresses. To test hypotheses that primed bryophytes can preserve their stress imprintin...

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Autores principales: Liu, Weiqiu, Xu, Jianqu, Fu, Wei, Wang, Xiangyuan, Lei, Chunyi, Chen, Yunfeng
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6580294/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31236224
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5205
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author Liu, Weiqiu
Xu, Jianqu
Fu, Wei
Wang, Xiangyuan
Lei, Chunyi
Chen, Yunfeng
author_facet Liu, Weiqiu
Xu, Jianqu
Fu, Wei
Wang, Xiangyuan
Lei, Chunyi
Chen, Yunfeng
author_sort Liu, Weiqiu
collection PubMed
description Plants are often repeatedly exposed to stresses during their lives and have a mechanism called stress imprinting that provides “memories” of stresses they experience and increases their ability to cope with later stresses. To test hypotheses that primed bryophytes can preserve their stress imprinting after 6 days of recovery and induce higher levels of osmolytes and ROS‐scavenging activities upon later stress exposure, and there exist population‐level differentiation in their desiccation defenses, we transplanted samples of two populations of each of two moss species, Hypnum plumaeforme and Pogonatum cirratum, in a nature reserve in southern China. After 16 months of acclimation, sets of each population were subjected to control, one‐time desiccation stress, duplicated desiccation stress and cross‐stress (low temperature stress followed by desiccation stress) treatments. Levels of oxidant enzymes, osmolytes, and phytohormones in the samples were then determined. The desiccation stress generally led to increases in activities or contents of superoxide dismutase, guaiacol peroxidase, catalase, proline, soluble sugars, soluble proteins, and stress hormones including abscisic acid (ABA), jasmonates (JA), and salicylic acid (SA), with differences between both species and populations. After a 6‐day recovery period, contents of phytohormones (including ABA, JA, SA, and cytokinins) in stressed H. plumaeforme had substantially fallen toward control levels. The duplicated and cross‐stress treatments generally led to further accumulation of proline, soluble sugars, and soluble proteins, with further increases in activities of antioxidant enzymes in some cases. Furthermore, significant differences between allochthonous and native populations were found in contents of malondialdehyde and osmolytes, as well as antioxidant enzyme activities. Our results confirm the hypotheses and highlight the importance of osmolytes in mosses' stress responses.
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spelling pubmed-65802942019-06-24 Evidence of stress imprinting with population‐level differences in two moss species Liu, Weiqiu Xu, Jianqu Fu, Wei Wang, Xiangyuan Lei, Chunyi Chen, Yunfeng Ecol Evol Original Research Plants are often repeatedly exposed to stresses during their lives and have a mechanism called stress imprinting that provides “memories” of stresses they experience and increases their ability to cope with later stresses. To test hypotheses that primed bryophytes can preserve their stress imprinting after 6 days of recovery and induce higher levels of osmolytes and ROS‐scavenging activities upon later stress exposure, and there exist population‐level differentiation in their desiccation defenses, we transplanted samples of two populations of each of two moss species, Hypnum plumaeforme and Pogonatum cirratum, in a nature reserve in southern China. After 16 months of acclimation, sets of each population were subjected to control, one‐time desiccation stress, duplicated desiccation stress and cross‐stress (low temperature stress followed by desiccation stress) treatments. Levels of oxidant enzymes, osmolytes, and phytohormones in the samples were then determined. The desiccation stress generally led to increases in activities or contents of superoxide dismutase, guaiacol peroxidase, catalase, proline, soluble sugars, soluble proteins, and stress hormones including abscisic acid (ABA), jasmonates (JA), and salicylic acid (SA), with differences between both species and populations. After a 6‐day recovery period, contents of phytohormones (including ABA, JA, SA, and cytokinins) in stressed H. plumaeforme had substantially fallen toward control levels. The duplicated and cross‐stress treatments generally led to further accumulation of proline, soluble sugars, and soluble proteins, with further increases in activities of antioxidant enzymes in some cases. Furthermore, significant differences between allochthonous and native populations were found in contents of malondialdehyde and osmolytes, as well as antioxidant enzyme activities. Our results confirm the hypotheses and highlight the importance of osmolytes in mosses' stress responses. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-05-09 /pmc/articles/PMC6580294/ /pubmed/31236224 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5205 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Liu, Weiqiu
Xu, Jianqu
Fu, Wei
Wang, Xiangyuan
Lei, Chunyi
Chen, Yunfeng
Evidence of stress imprinting with population‐level differences in two moss species
title Evidence of stress imprinting with population‐level differences in two moss species
title_full Evidence of stress imprinting with population‐level differences in two moss species
title_fullStr Evidence of stress imprinting with population‐level differences in two moss species
title_full_unstemmed Evidence of stress imprinting with population‐level differences in two moss species
title_short Evidence of stress imprinting with population‐level differences in two moss species
title_sort evidence of stress imprinting with population‐level differences in two moss species
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6580294/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31236224
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5205
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