Training Memory: Exploring the Intersection of Plant Stress Signalling and DNA Methylation
Abstract
Plants are sessile organisms living in a dynamic environment to
which they must continually acclimatize in order to maximise
their reproductive potential. This plasticity is achieved through
many complex and intricate signalling pathways that allow for the
continuous perception, response, and adjustments to new
environmental stimuli. A growing body of evidence suggests that
such pathways are not merely static but dynamic and can be primed
following repeated activation, thus affecting enhanced responses
to recurring stresses. Such examples of priming have led to a
notion that plants have some capacity to form stress memories of
past environmental perturbations. However, the full extent and
nature of such memory, and the machinery involved to store and
transmit these, remain enigmatic. One prospective mechanism is
the involvement of heritable, yet rapid and reversible, chromatin
marks that, theoretically, could be shaped by the environment to
convey a regulatory effect on the expression of the underlying
genotype, thus acting as an epigenetic layer of regulation.
This thesis explores the potential intersection of stress
signalling pathways and chromatin variation, specifically DNA
methylation, to co-ordinate plant stress responses. First,
mechanistic insights into the operation of a SAL1-PAP-XRN
retrograde signalling pathway to fine-tune plant physiology under
drought are presented. A key finding was that this pathway
complements canonical ABA signalling to induce stomatal closure,
thus minimising water-loss under water limited conditions.
Furthermore, the SAL1-PAP-XRN pathway was found to effect
chromatin patterns, specifically DNA methylation at short
transposable elements. These observations implicate cross-talk
with the RNA directed DNA methylation pathway, however, the exact
mechanism for this interaction remains to be identified.
Multiple investigations were performed to test for stress-induced
changes in DNA methylation that could potentially regulate
responses to recurring stress, thus conveying a memory. A
transgenerational recurring drought stress experiment tested
whether descendants of drought-exposed lineages displayed greater
drought tolerance (transgenerational memory). For the majority of
traits tested, including plant growth rate and drought survival,
offspring from plant lineages exposed to successive generations
of repeated drought stress performed comparably to those from
control lineages. However, memory was demonstrated in the form of
enhanced seed dormancy, in drought stressed lineages, that
persisted at least one generation removed from stress. Whether
this capacity for memory could be related to the type or severity
of stress applied, or species examined, remains to be
investigated further.
The transgenerational drought experiment was paired with a
recurring excess-light stress experiment to investigate memory
within a generation. Not only did this treatment lead to priming
of plant photosynthetic behaviour, indicative of a greater
capacity to withstand abrupt increases in light intensity, but
new leaves from stressed plants, developed in the absence of
stress, also showed altered photosynthetic characteristics
compared to unstressed counterparts. Such observations are
consistent with the mitotic transmission of stress-induced
traits.
Given multiple demonstrations of memory, comparisons were made to
unstressed controls to test for any correlating changes in DNA
methylation that might explain the phenomena observed. However,
in both experiments, observations of memory were found to be
independent of large-scale conserved changes in DNA methylation
discounting it as a conveyor of plant stress memories, under
these conditions, raising questions regarding the mechanism(s)
responsible for the examples of memory observed herein.
Ultimately, this thesis systematically evaluates the notion that
plants are able to form genuine memories, potentially underpinned
by reversible chromatin marks, that may facilitate acclimation to
local environments on a relatively rapid scale compared to the
fixation of adaptive genetic polymorphisms. Any capacity for
plant stress memories may provide avenues for further epigenomic
based agronomic tools to improve crop stress tolerance. However,
the nature of such memories observed here appear subtle and
nuanced, and are forgotten beyond a generation. Further
characterisation and mechanistic understanding of mitotic memory
mechanisms, however, may still hold potential. It was also
observed that stress signalling pathways can interact with those
involved in chromatin modification, giving novel insight into
their mechanistic functioning and the how the onset of stress may
induce chromatin changes. Despite this potential, the DNA
methylome was found to be relatively impervious to stress-induced
changes and, thus, is an unlikely memory mechanism.
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