Oligogalactolipid production during cold challenge is conserved in early diverging lineages

Author:

Barnes Allison C1ORCID,Myers Jennifer L12,Surber Samantha M1,Liang Zhikai3ORCID,Mower Jeffrey P3,Schnable James C3ORCID,Roston Rebecca L1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry, University of Nebraska-Lincoln , Lincoln, NE , USA

2. Department of Horticulture, North Carolina State University , Raleigh, NC , USA

3. Department of Agronomy and Horticulture, University of Nebraska-Lincoln , Lincoln, NE , USA

Abstract

Abstract Severe cold, defined as a damaging cold beyond acclimation temperatures, has unique responses, but the signaling and evolution of these responses are not well understood. Production of oligogalactolipids, which is triggered by cytosolic acidification in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), contributes to survival in severe cold. Here, we investigated oligogalactolipid production in species from bryophytes to angiosperms. Production of oligogalactolipids differed within each clade, suggesting multiple evolutionary origins of severe cold tolerance. We also observed greater oligogalactolipid production in control samples than in temperature-challenged samples of some species. Further examination of representative species revealed a tight association between temperature, damage, and oligogalactolipid production that scaled with the cold tolerance of each species. Based on oligogalactolipid production and transcript changes, multiple angiosperm species share a signal of oligogalactolipid production initially described in Arabidopsis, namely cytosolic acidification. Together, these data suggest that oligogalactolipid production is a severe cold response that originated from an ancestral damage response that remains in many land plant lineages and that cytosolic acidification may be a common signaling mechanism for its activation.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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