Cold Acclimation and Deacclimation of Winter Oilseed Rape, with Special Attention Being Paid to the Role of Brassinosteroids

Author:

Stachurska Julia1ORCID,Sadura Iwona1ORCID,Jurczyk Barbara2,Rudolphi-Szydło Elżbieta3ORCID,Dyba Barbara3ORCID,Pociecha Ewa2ORCID,Ostrowska Agnieszka1ORCID,Rys Magdalena1ORCID,Kvasnica Miroslav4ORCID,Oklestkova Jana4ORCID,Janeczko Anna1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Franciszek Górski Institute of Plant Physiology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Niezapominajek 21, 30-239 Krakow, Poland

2. Department of Plant Breeding, Physiology and Seed Science, Faculty of Agriculture and Economics, University of Agriculture in Kraków, Podłużna 3, 30-239 Krakow, Poland

3. Institute of Biology and Earth Sciences, University of the National Education Commission, Podchorążych 2, 30-084 Krakow, Poland

4. Laboratory of Growth Regulators, Faculty of Science and Institute of Experimental Botany of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Palacký University, Šlechtitelu 27, CZ-78371 Olomouc, Czech Republic

Abstract

Winter plants acclimate to frost mainly during the autumn months, through the process of cold acclimation. Global climate change is causing changes in weather patterns such as the occurrence of warmer periods during late autumn or in winter. An increase in temperature after cold acclimation can decrease frost tolerance, which is particularly dangerous for winter crops. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of brassinosteroids (BRs) and BR analogues as protective agents against the negative results of deacclimation. Plants were cold-acclimated (3 weeks, 4 °C) and deacclimated (1 week, 16/9 °C d/n). Deacclimation generally reversed the cold-induced changes in the level of the putative brassinosteroid receptor protein (BRI1), the expression of BR-induced COR, and the expression of SERK1, which is involved in BR signal transduction. The deacclimation-induced decrease in frost tolerance in oilseed rape could to some extent be limited by applying steroid regulators. The deacclimation in plants could be detected using non-invasive measurements such as leaf reflectance, chlorophyll a fluorescence, and gas exchange monitoring.

Funder

National Science Centre

Publisher

MDPI AG

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