4.7 Article

Root endophyte induced plant thermotolerance by constitutive chromatin modification at heat stress memory gene loci

Journal

EMBO REPORTS
Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/embr.202051049

Keywords

EIN3; endophyte; HSFA2; memory gene; thermotolerance

Funding

  1. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) [BAS/1/1062-01-01]

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Research shows that using beneficial microbes like Enterobacter sp. SA187 can enhance heat tolerance in wheat by altering gene expression, inducing plants to have stronger heat tolerance, and sustainable crop growth.
Global warming has become a critical challenge to food security, causing severe yield losses of major crops worldwide. Conventional and transgenic breeding strategies to enhance plant thermotolerance are laborious and expensive. Therefore, the use of beneficial microbes could be an alternative approach. Here, we report that the root endophyte Enterobacter sp. SA187 induces thermotolerance in wheat in the laboratory as well as in open-field agriculture. To unravel the molecular mechanisms, we used Arabidopsis thaliana as model plant. SA187 reprogramed the Arabidopsis transcriptome via HSFA2-dependent enhancement of H3K4me3 levels at heat stress memory gene loci. Unlike thermopriming, SA187-induced thermotolerance is mediated by ethylene signaling via the transcription factor EIN3. In contrast to the transient chromatin modification by thermopriming, SA187 induces constitutive H3K4me3 modification of heat stress memory genes, generating robust thermotolerance in plants. Importantly, microbial community composition of wheat plants in open-field agriculture is not influenced by SA187, indicating that beneficial microbes can be a powerful tool to enhance thermotolerance of crops in a sustainable manner.

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