Litcius/Paper detail

Priming‐induced alterations in histone modifications modulate transcriptional responses in soybean under salt stress

Wai‐Shing Yung, Qianwen Wang, Mingkun Huang, Fuk‐Ling Wong, Ailin Liu, Ming‐Sin Ng, Kwan‐Pok Li, Ching‐Ching Sze, Man‐Wah Li, Hon‐Ming Lam

2021The Plant Journal62 citationsDOI

Abstract

Plants that have experienced certain abiotic stress may gain tolerance to a similar stress in subsequent exposure. This phenomenon, called priming, was observed here in soybean (Glycine max) seedlings exposed to salt stress. Time-course transcriptomic profiles revealed distinctively different transcriptional responses in the primed seedlings from those in the non-primed seedlings under high salinity stress, indicating a stress response strategy of repressing unhelpful biotic stress responses and focusing on the promotion of those responses important for salt tolerance. To identify histone marks altered by the priming salinity treatment, a genome-wide profiling of histone 3 lysine 4 dimethylation (H3K4me2), H3K4me3, and histone 3 lysine 9 acetylation (H3K9ac) was performed. Our integrative analyses revealed that priming induced drastic alterations in these histone marks, which coordinately modified the stress response, ion homeostasis, and cell wall modification. Furthermore, transcriptional network analyses unveiled epigenetically modified networks which mediate the strategic downregulation of defense responses. Altering the histone acetylation status using a chemical inhibitor could elicit the priming-like transcriptional responses in non-primed seedlings, confirming the importance of histone marks in forming the priming response.

Topics & Concepts

HistoneH3K4me3AcetylationPriming (agriculture)Histone H3BiologyEpigeneticsCell biologyBiochemistryChemistryGene expressionBotanyGenePromoterGerminationPlant Molecular Biology ResearchPlant Gene Expression AnalysisPlant Stress Responses and Tolerance
Priming‐induced alterations in histone modifications modulate transcriptional responses in soybean under salt stress | Litcius