Scientists at the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) are looking for ways to help specialty crops beat the heat.
A new study has identified genes that may help plants cope with stress from high temperatures. It could set the stage for developing crops bred for enhanced heat tolerance, said Bala Rathinasabapathi, senior author of the study and a professor in the UF/IFAS horticultural sciences department.
Some plant species are more sensitive to heat than others. But when temperatures rise above what a species can withstand, the plants become stressed. This can lead to reduced yields, Rathinasabapathi explained.
“Our program has been studying how plants respond to high temperature stress and designing new ways to improve the tolerance levels of crops. When we placed plants under controlled conditions and increased the temperatures, we noticed that young leaves were affected much less than older leaves,” Rathinasabapathi said.
“This observation prompted us to question the cause of such a difference,” he added. “We rationalized that if we could identify the genes that are involved in young leaves’ tolerance to high temperature stress, it will provide testable ideas to improve heat stress tolerance of crops.”
In the experiment, study co-author Qingyuan Xiang, a Ph.D. student in Rathinasabapathi’s lab during the study, tested how the plant Arabidopsis thaliana changes its gene expression in response to extreme heat. Arabidopsis is often used in the plant sciences because it grows relatively quickly and its genetics are well understood. This makes it a good candidate for experiments aiming to understand plants’ genetic response to different environmental conditions.
The scientists exposed some Arabidopsis plants to high heat — 107.6 degrees Fahrenheit — while others were placed in more typical non-stress conditions. After one hour under high heat, the researchers took samples of the plants’ young and old leaves and repeated the process again after 10 hours. The scientists analyzed gene expression patterns in young and older leaves.
By sampling at different times, the researchers saw how gene expression progressed in the young leaves compared with older leaves. They also compared the patterns to those in plants not exposed to heat.
“The current study provided us lists of specific genes that may have functions in heat stress tolerance in plants. In the future, we will aim to test those genes for their potential connections to heat stress tolerance in plants and even use them in breeding strategies,” Rathinasabapathi said.