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Cold acclimation is a vital strategy for improving plant cold resistance. Many tropical/subtropical plants, such as Litchi chinensis[63], Ananas comosus[64], Citrus[65], Musa spp[66], and C. equisetifolia[67], can gradually distribute and survive in wider geographic and temperature ranges through cold acclimation. In this study, whether acclimated or not, C. equisetifolia maintained a low relative ion leakage rate when exposed to −2 °C, −4 °C, and −6 °C for 2 h, respectively (Supplemental Table S3), demonstrating that C. equisetifolia had a certain degree of tolerance to freezing stress for short treatment time. However, with longer exposure to low temperature, the ion leakage rate dropped to 17.16% after treatment at −6 °C for 6 h, compared to 53.89% of non-acclimated C. equisetifolia seedlings. On the contrary, it was prominent difference in the survival rate between the NA plants (21.15%) and CA plants (59.02%) (Supplemental Table S3). Further, when treating plants with the following condition (at 4 °C for 4 d and then −8 °C for 6 h), the rate of survival and the ion leakage of C. equisetifolia seedlings was separately 5.22% and 45.84% (Supplemental Table S3, Fig. 1c, d). In contrast, under the same treatment condition, the survival rate of A. thaliana increased from 0 to 100% after cold acclimation (Fig. 1c). This proposed that cold acclimation can improve the cold resistance of C. equisetifolia to some extent although this improvement was significantly lower than that of A. thaliana. It is speculated that C. equisetifolia may lack certain low temperature response or regulatory factors that are present in A. thaliana.
Comparing the low temperature transcriptomes of C. equisetifolia and A. thaliana showed that many low temperature responsive genes in C. equisetifolia exhibited no expression or weak or delayed response under low temperature stress, particularly in the CBF regulation pathway (Figs 4, 7 & 9). Further analysis revealed that numerous downstream target genes of CBF lacked the DRE binding element (Figs 7, 10), leading to influence the binding of CBFs to the downstream genes and then effect the expression of downstream genes, therefore decrease the cold adaptability of tropical and subtropical plants.
In A. thaliana, cold acclimation triggers altering the expression of a large number of cold regulated genes[62]. According to whether directly regulated by CBF or not, these COR genes are divided into CBF-dependent pathway and CBF-independent pathway. Many studies have reported that different transcription factors and proteins are involved in CBF-dependent signal pathways[6]. It has been shown that plenty of COR genes, including KIN1/2, COR15A/B, LTI78[68,69], play major roles in regulating plant' cold response. Overexpressing of COR15A, encoding a chloroplast-targeted polypeptide in A. thaliana, results in a marked increase in the survival rate of separated protoplast frozen at −4.5 °C to −7 °C[70,71]. By comparing the homologous COR genes in C. equisetifolia and A. thaliana, we found that C. equisetifolia lacked homologous genes of COR15A, COR15B, HTT5, and STMP2 (Fig. 4), and the similar case was also discovered in other tropical/subtropical plants, such as Theobroma cacao, Musa nana Lour, Citrus clementina, Citrus sinensis, and Hevea brasiliensis (Fig. 11), speculating that the loss of key COR genes may be a crucial factor for their low temperature sensitivity and this may happen during the evolution process of tropical/subtropical plants in high temperature environments.
Cold-induced transcription factors CBF/DREB1 from AP2/ERF gene family respond to low temperature condition by directly modulating the expression of COR genes[47,59]. In Arabidopsis, the expression of CBFs shows rapid and early response to cold acclimation, and reaches the highest transcription level at 4 °C within 2 h[61,72]. Some studies have displayed that the expression of CBFs often exhibits a delayed response in Hevea brasiliensis, which is one of the typical tropical trees and sensitive to low temperature[32,34,73]. C. equisetifolia contained five CBF homologous genes, and cold acclimation highly induced the expression of CeqCBFs, which was accordance with the expression pattern of CBFs in A. thaliana, except that the peak expression of CeqCBFs occurred at 12 h after the start of cold acclimation (Fig. 5, Fig. 9b). In addition, CBF in C. equisetifolia, as well as in other tropical/subtropical plants, shared high conservation with Arabidopsis CBF in conserved structure domains, despite of certain differences in individual amino acid sites (Fig. 6a, Supplemental Fig. S5), suggesting that CBF maintained the conservation during the evolutionary process in plants at different latitudes. Nevertheless, our experiments had revealed that C. equisetifolia CBF could effectively restore the sensitive phenotype of Arabidopsis cbf1/2/3 triple mutants to low temperature conditions (Fig. 6d, Supplemental Fig. S3a), indicating that CBFs were functionally conserved in C. equisetifolia. Considering that cold acclimation may take a relatively long time, the postpone response of CeqCBFs may not be the primary factor causing its sensitivity to low temperatures. Therefore, the main reason for the cold intolerance of C. equisetifolia could be the absence of the CBF binding element (DRE) of the COR genes in C. equisetifolia and multiple tropical/subtropical plants (Fig. 7, Fig. 11). We speculated that long-term exposure to high-temperature environments may result in the loss of these elements during the evolutionary process of tropical/subtropical plants, thereby, leading to the sensitivity to low temperatures. It is worth noting that, both in C. equisetifolia and A. thaliana, COR genes-mediated by the low temperature at different time points exhibited a typical time-dependent cascade amplification. In detail, most early cold responsive genes quickly returned to the expression levels before induction, while other cold responsive genes started to respond (Fig. 2c). In such a situation, the delayed expression of CBF may affect this cascade regulation mode, and may also be one of the reasons for C. equisetifolia's cold intolerance.
Previous studies focused on the certification of low temperature responsive genes in order to understand the molecular regulation mechanisms and to enhance plant cold resistance through overexpression these genes. By comparing and analyzing differences in low-temperature response between the model plant A. thaliana and C. equisetifolia, we hypothesized that the loss of DRE elements in multiple COR genes in C. equisetifolia was associated with its response to low temperatures, and the absence of key COR genes was also a significant factor contributing to C. equisetifolia's and other tropical/subtropical plants' sensitivity to low temperatures (Fig. 12). Therefore, introducing DRE elements into the related genes or expressing the absent genes in tropical/subtropical plants using modern biotechnological tools could be a new and important research ideas for improving the tropical/subtropical plants' cold resistance.
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Cite this article
Ren H, Zhong Y, Guo L, Hussian J, Zhou C, et al. 2023. Molecular mechanisms of low-temperature sensitivity in tropical/subtropical plants: a case study of Casuarina equisetifolia. Forestry Research 3:20 doi: 10.48130/FR-2023-0020
Molecular mechanisms of low-temperature sensitivity in tropical/subtropical plants: a case study of Casuarina equisetifolia
- Received: 23 July 2023
- Accepted: 24 August 2023
- Published online: 31 August 2023
Abstract: Low temperature is a limiting factor affecting plant growth and development. Casuarina equisetifolia, a typical tropical and subtropical tree important for the ecological restoration of coastal beaches, is sensitive to cold stress. By comparing cold tolerance between C. equisetifolia and Arabidopsis, we investigated the molecular basis underlying the cold sensitivity of C. equisetifolia. Transcriptomic analysis showed that the number of cold-induced genes in C. equisetifolia was significantly less than that in Arabidopsis, and notably, the response of cold-induced genes was also delayed in C. equisetifolia. Among the cold-induced genes, C-repeat binding factors (CBFs), the major transcription factors in cold acclimation in Arabidopsis, showed a delayed cold-induced expression in C. equisetifolia, despite that C. equisetifolia CBFs could restore the low temperature-sensitive phenotype of Arabidopsis cbfs triple mutants. Interestingly, some key cold-responsive genes (e.g., COR15A and COR15B) targeted by Arabidopsis CBF were absent in the C. equisetifolia genome and many cold-responsive genes in C. equisetifolia lacked the DRE element (i.e., CBF binding cis-element). Moreover, like in C. equisetifolia, many COR genes in other tropical/subtropical plants lacked the DRE element or were directly missing. These two factors could be the underlying reasons for the low-temperature sensitivity of C. equisetifolia and other tropical/subtropical plants.
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Key words:
- Cold stress /
- Cold acclimation /
- Transcriptome /
- CBF /
- Cold responsive gene /
- Casuarina equisetifolia