Deciphering transcriptomic signatures explaining the phenotypic plasticity of nonheading lettuce genotypes under artificial light conditions

Author:

Yamashita Hiroto1ORCID,Wada Kaede C.1,Inagaki Noritoshi2ORCID,Fujimoto Zui2,Yonemaru Jun‐ichi13,Itoh Hironori1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Crop Science, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization Tsukuba Ibaraki Japan

2. Research Center for Advanced Analysis, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization Tsukuba Ibaraki Japan

3. Research Center for Agricultural Information Technology, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization Tsukuba Ibaraki Japan

Abstract

AbstractElucidating the mechanisms and pathways involved in genotype–environment (G×E) interactions and phenotypic plasticity is critical for improving plant growth. Controlled environment agricultural systems allow growers to modulate the environment for particular genotypes. In this study, we evaluated the effects of interactions among 14 genotypes and four artificial light environments on leaf lettuce phenotypes and dissected the underlying molecular mechanism via transcriptome‐based modeling. Variations in morphological traits and phytochemical concentrations in response to artificial light treatments revealed significant G×E interactions. The appropriate genotype and artificial light combinations for maximizing phenotypic expression were determined on the basis of a joint regression analysis and the additive main effect and multiplicative interaction model for these G×E interactions. Transcriptome‐based regression modeling explained approximately 50%–90% of the G×E variations. Further analyzes indicated Red Lettuce Leaves 4 (RLL4) regulates UV‐B and blue light signaling through the effects of the HY5–MBW pathway on flavonoid biosynthesis and contributes to natural variations in the light‐responsive plasticity of lettuce traits. Our study represents an important step toward elucidating the phenotypic variations due to G×E interactions in nonheading lettuce under artificial light conditions.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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