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Seed-to-Seedling Transition in Pisum sativum L.: A Transcriptomic Approach

The seed-to-seedling transition is a crucial step in the plant life cycle. The transition occurs at the end of seed germination and corresponds to the initiation of embryonic root growth. To improve our understanding of how a seed transforms into a seedling, we germinated the Pisum sativum L. seeds...

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Autores principales: Smolikova, Galina, Strygina, Ksenia, Krylova, Ekaterina, Vikhorev, Aleksander, Bilova, Tatiana, Frolov, Andrej, Khlestkina, Elena, Medvedev, Sergei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9268910/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35807638
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11131686
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author Smolikova, Galina
Strygina, Ksenia
Krylova, Ekaterina
Vikhorev, Aleksander
Bilova, Tatiana
Frolov, Andrej
Khlestkina, Elena
Medvedev, Sergei
author_facet Smolikova, Galina
Strygina, Ksenia
Krylova, Ekaterina
Vikhorev, Aleksander
Bilova, Tatiana
Frolov, Andrej
Khlestkina, Elena
Medvedev, Sergei
author_sort Smolikova, Galina
collection PubMed
description The seed-to-seedling transition is a crucial step in the plant life cycle. The transition occurs at the end of seed germination and corresponds to the initiation of embryonic root growth. To improve our understanding of how a seed transforms into a seedling, we germinated the Pisum sativum L. seeds for 72 h and divided them into samples before and after radicle protrusion. Before radicle protrusion, seeds survived after drying and formed normally developed seedlings upon rehydration. Radicle protrusion increased the moisture content level in seed axes, and the accumulation of ROS first generated in the embryonic root and plumule. The water and oxidative status shift correlated with the desiccation tolerance loss. Then, we compared RNA sequencing-based transcriptomics in the embryonic axes isolated from pea seeds before and after radicle protrusion. We identified 24,184 differentially expressed genes during the transition to the post-germination stage. Among them, 2101 genes showed more prominent expression. They were related to primary and secondary metabolism, photosynthesis, biosynthesis of cell wall components, redox status, and responses to biotic stress. On the other hand, 415 genes showed significantly decreased expression, including the groups related to water deprivation (eight genes) and response to the ABA stimulus (fifteen genes). We assume that the water deprivation group, especially three genes also belonging to ABA stimulus (LTI65, LTP4, and HVA22E), may be crucial for the desiccation tolerance loss during a metabolic switch from seed to seedling. The latter is also accompanied by the suppression of ABA-related transcription factors ABI3, ABI4, and ABI5. Among them, HVA22E, ABI4, and ABI5 were highly conservative in functional domains and showed homologous sequences in different drought-tolerant species. These findings elaborate on the critical biochemical pathways and genes regulating seed-to-seedling transition.
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spelling pubmed-92689102022-07-09 Seed-to-Seedling Transition in Pisum sativum L.: A Transcriptomic Approach Smolikova, Galina Strygina, Ksenia Krylova, Ekaterina Vikhorev, Aleksander Bilova, Tatiana Frolov, Andrej Khlestkina, Elena Medvedev, Sergei Plants (Basel) Article The seed-to-seedling transition is a crucial step in the plant life cycle. The transition occurs at the end of seed germination and corresponds to the initiation of embryonic root growth. To improve our understanding of how a seed transforms into a seedling, we germinated the Pisum sativum L. seeds for 72 h and divided them into samples before and after radicle protrusion. Before radicle protrusion, seeds survived after drying and formed normally developed seedlings upon rehydration. Radicle protrusion increased the moisture content level in seed axes, and the accumulation of ROS first generated in the embryonic root and plumule. The water and oxidative status shift correlated with the desiccation tolerance loss. Then, we compared RNA sequencing-based transcriptomics in the embryonic axes isolated from pea seeds before and after radicle protrusion. We identified 24,184 differentially expressed genes during the transition to the post-germination stage. Among them, 2101 genes showed more prominent expression. They were related to primary and secondary metabolism, photosynthesis, biosynthesis of cell wall components, redox status, and responses to biotic stress. On the other hand, 415 genes showed significantly decreased expression, including the groups related to water deprivation (eight genes) and response to the ABA stimulus (fifteen genes). We assume that the water deprivation group, especially three genes also belonging to ABA stimulus (LTI65, LTP4, and HVA22E), may be crucial for the desiccation tolerance loss during a metabolic switch from seed to seedling. The latter is also accompanied by the suppression of ABA-related transcription factors ABI3, ABI4, and ABI5. Among them, HVA22E, ABI4, and ABI5 were highly conservative in functional domains and showed homologous sequences in different drought-tolerant species. These findings elaborate on the critical biochemical pathways and genes regulating seed-to-seedling transition. MDPI 2022-06-25 /pmc/articles/PMC9268910/ /pubmed/35807638 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11131686 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Smolikova, Galina
Strygina, Ksenia
Krylova, Ekaterina
Vikhorev, Aleksander
Bilova, Tatiana
Frolov, Andrej
Khlestkina, Elena
Medvedev, Sergei
Seed-to-Seedling Transition in Pisum sativum L.: A Transcriptomic Approach
title Seed-to-Seedling Transition in Pisum sativum L.: A Transcriptomic Approach
title_full Seed-to-Seedling Transition in Pisum sativum L.: A Transcriptomic Approach
title_fullStr Seed-to-Seedling Transition in Pisum sativum L.: A Transcriptomic Approach
title_full_unstemmed Seed-to-Seedling Transition in Pisum sativum L.: A Transcriptomic Approach
title_short Seed-to-Seedling Transition in Pisum sativum L.: A Transcriptomic Approach
title_sort seed-to-seedling transition in pisum sativum l.: a transcriptomic approach
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9268910/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35807638
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11131686
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