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Effects of sublethal single, simultaneous and sequential abiotic stresses on phenotypic traits of Arabidopsis thaliana

Plant responses to abiotic stresses are complex and dynamic, and involve changes in different traits, either as the direct consequence of the stress, or as an active acclimatory response. Abiotic stresses frequently occur simultaneously or in succession, rather than in isolation. Despite this, most...

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Autores principales: Morales, Alejandro, de Boer, Hugo J, Douma, Jacob C, Elsen, Saskia, Engels, Sophie, Glimmerveen, Tobias, Sajeev, Nikita, Huber, Martina, Luimes, Mathijs, Luitjens, Emma, Raatjes, Kevin, Hsieh, Chenyun, Teapal, Juliane, Wildenbeest, Tessa, Jiang, Zhang, Pareek, Ashwani, Singla-Pareek, Sneh, Yin, Xinyou, Evers, Jochem, Anten, Niels P R, van Zanten, Martijn, Sasidharan, Rashmi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9291396/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35854681
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aobpla/plac029
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author Morales, Alejandro
de Boer, Hugo J
Douma, Jacob C
Elsen, Saskia
Engels, Sophie
Glimmerveen, Tobias
Sajeev, Nikita
Huber, Martina
Luimes, Mathijs
Luitjens, Emma
Raatjes, Kevin
Hsieh, Chenyun
Teapal, Juliane
Wildenbeest, Tessa
Jiang, Zhang
Pareek, Ashwani
Singla-Pareek, Sneh
Yin, Xinyou
Evers, Jochem
Anten, Niels P R
van Zanten, Martijn
Sasidharan, Rashmi
author_facet Morales, Alejandro
de Boer, Hugo J
Douma, Jacob C
Elsen, Saskia
Engels, Sophie
Glimmerveen, Tobias
Sajeev, Nikita
Huber, Martina
Luimes, Mathijs
Luitjens, Emma
Raatjes, Kevin
Hsieh, Chenyun
Teapal, Juliane
Wildenbeest, Tessa
Jiang, Zhang
Pareek, Ashwani
Singla-Pareek, Sneh
Yin, Xinyou
Evers, Jochem
Anten, Niels P R
van Zanten, Martijn
Sasidharan, Rashmi
author_sort Morales, Alejandro
collection PubMed
description Plant responses to abiotic stresses are complex and dynamic, and involve changes in different traits, either as the direct consequence of the stress, or as an active acclimatory response. Abiotic stresses frequently occur simultaneously or in succession, rather than in isolation. Despite this, most studies have focused on a single stress and single or few plant traits. To address this gap, our study comprehensively and categorically quantified the individual and combined effects of three major abiotic stresses associated with climate change (flooding, progressive drought and high temperature) on 12 phenotypic traits related to morphology, development, growth and fitness, at different developmental stages in four Arabidopsis thaliana accessions. Combined sublethal stresses were applied either simultaneously (high temperature and drought) or sequentially (flooding followed by drought). In total, we analysed the phenotypic responses of 1782 individuals across these stresses and different developmental stages. Overall, abiotic stresses and their combinations resulted in distinct patterns of effects across the traits analysed, with both quantitative and qualitative differences across accessions. Stress combinations had additive effects on some traits, whereas clear positive and negative interactions were observed for other traits: 9 out of 12 traits for high temperature and drought, 6 out of 12 traits for post-submergence and drought showed significant interactions. In many cases where the stresses interacted, the strength of interactions varied across accessions. Hence, our results indicated a general pattern of response in most phenotypic traits to the different stresses and stress combinations, but it also indicated a natural genetic variation in the strength of these responses. This includes novel results regarding the lack of a response to drought after submergence and a decoupling between leaf number and flowering time after submergence. Overall, our study provides a rich characterization of trait responses of Arabidopsis plants to sublethal abiotic stresses at the phenotypic level and can serve as starting point for further in-depth physiological research and plant modelling efforts.
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spelling pubmed-92913962022-07-18 Effects of sublethal single, simultaneous and sequential abiotic stresses on phenotypic traits of Arabidopsis thaliana Morales, Alejandro de Boer, Hugo J Douma, Jacob C Elsen, Saskia Engels, Sophie Glimmerveen, Tobias Sajeev, Nikita Huber, Martina Luimes, Mathijs Luitjens, Emma Raatjes, Kevin Hsieh, Chenyun Teapal, Juliane Wildenbeest, Tessa Jiang, Zhang Pareek, Ashwani Singla-Pareek, Sneh Yin, Xinyou Evers, Jochem Anten, Niels P R van Zanten, Martijn Sasidharan, Rashmi AoB Plants Studies Plant responses to abiotic stresses are complex and dynamic, and involve changes in different traits, either as the direct consequence of the stress, or as an active acclimatory response. Abiotic stresses frequently occur simultaneously or in succession, rather than in isolation. Despite this, most studies have focused on a single stress and single or few plant traits. To address this gap, our study comprehensively and categorically quantified the individual and combined effects of three major abiotic stresses associated with climate change (flooding, progressive drought and high temperature) on 12 phenotypic traits related to morphology, development, growth and fitness, at different developmental stages in four Arabidopsis thaliana accessions. Combined sublethal stresses were applied either simultaneously (high temperature and drought) or sequentially (flooding followed by drought). In total, we analysed the phenotypic responses of 1782 individuals across these stresses and different developmental stages. Overall, abiotic stresses and their combinations resulted in distinct patterns of effects across the traits analysed, with both quantitative and qualitative differences across accessions. Stress combinations had additive effects on some traits, whereas clear positive and negative interactions were observed for other traits: 9 out of 12 traits for high temperature and drought, 6 out of 12 traits for post-submergence and drought showed significant interactions. In many cases where the stresses interacted, the strength of interactions varied across accessions. Hence, our results indicated a general pattern of response in most phenotypic traits to the different stresses and stress combinations, but it also indicated a natural genetic variation in the strength of these responses. This includes novel results regarding the lack of a response to drought after submergence and a decoupling between leaf number and flowering time after submergence. Overall, our study provides a rich characterization of trait responses of Arabidopsis plants to sublethal abiotic stresses at the phenotypic level and can serve as starting point for further in-depth physiological research and plant modelling efforts. Oxford University Press 2022-06-23 /pmc/articles/PMC9291396/ /pubmed/35854681 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aobpla/plac029 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Studies
Morales, Alejandro
de Boer, Hugo J
Douma, Jacob C
Elsen, Saskia
Engels, Sophie
Glimmerveen, Tobias
Sajeev, Nikita
Huber, Martina
Luimes, Mathijs
Luitjens, Emma
Raatjes, Kevin
Hsieh, Chenyun
Teapal, Juliane
Wildenbeest, Tessa
Jiang, Zhang
Pareek, Ashwani
Singla-Pareek, Sneh
Yin, Xinyou
Evers, Jochem
Anten, Niels P R
van Zanten, Martijn
Sasidharan, Rashmi
Effects of sublethal single, simultaneous and sequential abiotic stresses on phenotypic traits of Arabidopsis thaliana
title Effects of sublethal single, simultaneous and sequential abiotic stresses on phenotypic traits of Arabidopsis thaliana
title_full Effects of sublethal single, simultaneous and sequential abiotic stresses on phenotypic traits of Arabidopsis thaliana
title_fullStr Effects of sublethal single, simultaneous and sequential abiotic stresses on phenotypic traits of Arabidopsis thaliana
title_full_unstemmed Effects of sublethal single, simultaneous and sequential abiotic stresses on phenotypic traits of Arabidopsis thaliana
title_short Effects of sublethal single, simultaneous and sequential abiotic stresses on phenotypic traits of Arabidopsis thaliana
title_sort effects of sublethal single, simultaneous and sequential abiotic stresses on phenotypic traits of arabidopsis thaliana
topic Studies
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9291396/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35854681
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aobpla/plac029
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