Novel molecules and target genes for vegetative heat tolerance in wheat.
Abstract
To prevent yield losses caused by climate change it is important to
identify naturally tolerant genotypes with traits and related pathways
that can be targeted for crop improvement. Here we report on the
characterization of contrasting vegetative heat tolerance in two UK
bread wheat varieties. Under chronic heat stress, the heat-tolerant
cultivar Cadenza produced an excessive number of tillers which
translated into more spikes and higher grain yield compared to
heat-sensitive Paragon. RNAseq and metabolomics analyses revealed a set
of about 400 heat-responsive genes common to both genotypes. Only 71
genes showed a genotype x temperature interaction. As well as known
heat-responsive genes such as HSPs, several genes that have not been
previously linked to the heat response, particularly in wheat, have been
identified, including several dehydrins, a number of ankyrin-repeat
protein-encoding genes, and lipases. Over 5000 genotype-specific genes
were identified, including photosynthesis-related genes which might
explain the observed ability of Cadenza to maintain photosynthetic rate
under heat stress. Contrary to primary metabolites, secondary
metabolites showed a highly differentiated heat response and genotypic
differences. These included e.g., benzoxazinoid (DIBOA, DIMBOA) but in
particular phenylpropanoids and flavonoids with known radical scavenging
capacity, which was assessed via the DPPH assay. The most highly
heat-induced metabolite was (glycosylated) propanediol, which is widely
used in industry as an anti-freeze. To our knowledge this is the first
report on its response to stress in plants. The identified metabolites
and candidate genes provide novel targets for the development of heat
tolerant wheat.