Deep learning‐based quantification and transcriptomic profiling reveal a methyl jasmonate‐mediated glandular trichome formation pathway in Cannabis sativa

Author:

Huang Xiaoqin1,Chen Wei1,Zhao Yuqing1,Chen Jingjing1,Ouyang Yuzeng1,Li Minxuan1,Gu Yu1,Wu Qinqin1,Cai Sen1,Guo Foqin1,Zhu Panpan1,Ao Deyong1,You Shijun1,Vasseur Liette2,Liu Yuanyuan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Haixia Institute of Science and Technology, State Key Laboratory of Ecological Pest Control for Fujian and Taiwan Crops, College of Life Sciences Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University Fuzhou 350002 China

2. Department of Biological Sciences Brock University St. Catharines Ontario L2S 3A1 Canada

Abstract

SUMMARYCannabis glandular trichomes (GTs) are economically and biotechnologically important structures that have a remarkable morphology and capacity to produce, store, and secrete diverse classes of secondary metabolites. However, our understanding of the developmental changes and the underlying molecular processes involved in cannabis GT development is limited. In this study, we developed Cannabis Glandular Trichome Detection Model (CGTDM), a deep learning‐based model capable of differentiating and quantifying three types of cannabis GTs with a high degree of efficiency and accuracy. By profiling at eight different time points, we captured dynamic changes in gene expression, phenotypes, and metabolic processes associated with GT development. By integrating weighted gene co‐expression network analysis with CGTDM measurements, we established correlations between phenotypic variations in GT traits and the global transcriptome profiles across the developmental gradient. Notably, we identified a module containing methyl jasmonate (MeJA)‐responsive genes that significantly correlated with stalked GT density and cannabinoid content during development, suggesting the existence of a MeJA‐mediated GT formation pathway. Our findings were further supported by the successful promotion of GT development in cannabis through exogenous MeJA treatment. Importantly, we have identified CsMYC4 as a key transcription factor that positively regulates GT formation via MeJA signaling in cannabis. These findings provide novel tools for GT detection and counting, as well as valuable information for understanding the molecular regulatory mechanism of GT formation, which has the potential to facilitate the molecular breeding, targeted engineering, informed harvest timing, and manipulation of cannabinoid production.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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