Life under the snow: A year‐round transcriptome analysis of Antarctic mosses in natural habitats provides insight into the molecular adaptation of plants under extreme environment

Author:

Yu Jihyeon1,Lee Hyoungseok12,Cho Sung Mi12ORCID,Lee Yelim13,Kim Dockyu1,Hong Soon Gyu12,Park Sang‐Jong4,Kim Sang‐Gyu5,Jin Hongshi1,Lee Jungeun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Life Sciences Korea Polar Research Institute Incheon South Korea

2. Polar Science University of Science and Technology Incheon South Korea

3. School of Biological Sciences Seoul National University Seoul South Korea

4. Division of Atmospheric Sciences Korea Polar Research Institute Incheon South Korea

5. Department of Biological Sciences Korea Advanced Institute for Science and Technology Daejeon Korea

Abstract

AbstractMosses are vital components of ecosystems, exhibiting remarkable adaptability across diverse habitats from deserts to polar ice caps. Sanionia uncinata (Hedw.) Loeske, a dominant Antarctic moss survives extreme environmental condition through perennial lifecycles involving growth and dormancy alternation. This study explores genetic controls and molecular mechanisms enabling S. uncinata to cope with seasonality of the Antarctic environment. We analysed the seasonal transcriptome dynamics of S. uncinata collected monthly from February 2015 to January 2016 in King George Island, Antarctica. Findings indicate that genes involved in plant growth were predominantly upregulated in Antarctic summer, while those associated with protein synthesis and cell cycle showed marked expression during the winter‐to‐summer transition. Genes implicated in cellular stress and abscisic acid signalling were highly expressed in winter. Further, validation included a comparison of the Antarctic field transcriptome data with controlled environment simulation of Antarctic summer and winter temperatures, which revealed consistent gene expression patterns in both datasets. This proposes a seasonal gene regulatory model of S. uncinate to understand moss adaptation to extreme environments. Additionally, this data set is a valuable resource for predicting genetic responses to climatic fluctuations, enhancing our knowledge of Antarctic flora's resilience to global climate change.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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