Single seeds exhibit transcriptional heterogeneity during secondary dormancy induction

Author:

Krzyszton Michal1ORCID,Yatusevich Ruslan1ORCID,Wrona Magdalena1ORCID,Sacharowski Sebastian P1ORCID,Adamska Dorota2ORCID,Swiezewski Szymon1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Seeds Molecular Biology, Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics, PAS , Warsaw 02-106, Poland

2. Genomics Core Facility, Centre of New Technologies, University of Warsaw , Warsaw 02-097, Poland

Abstract

Abstract Seeds are highly resilient to the external environment, which allows plants to persist in unpredictable and unfavorable conditions. Some plant species have adopted a bet-hedging strategy to germinate a variable fraction of seeds in any given condition, and this could be explained by population-based threshold models. Here, in the model plant Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), we induced secondary dormancy (SD) to address the transcriptional heterogeneity among seeds that leads to binary germination/nongermination outcomes. We developed a single-seed RNA-seq strategy that allowed us to observe a reduction in seed transcriptional heterogeneity as seeds enter stress conditions, followed by an increase during recovery. We identified groups of genes whose expression showed a specific pattern through a time course and used these groups to position the individual seeds along the transcriptional gradient of germination competence. In agreement, transcriptomes of dormancy-deficient seeds (mutant of DELAY OF GERMINATION 1) showed a shift toward higher values of the germination competence index. Interestingly, a significant fraction of genes with variable expression encoded translation-related factors. In summary, interrogating hundreds of single-seed transcriptomes during SD-inducing treatment revealed variability among the transcriptomes that could result from the distribution of population-based sensitivity thresholds. Our results also showed that single-seed RNA-seq is the method of choice for analyzing seed bet-hedging-related phenomena.

Funder

Foundation for Polish Science (TEAM

National Science Centre, Poland grant (SONATA BIS

National Science Centre

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Genetics,Physiology

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