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Main Authors: Hongrui Wang, Al P. Kovaleski, Jason P. Londo
Format: Artículo Open Access
Published: Wiley 2024
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Online Access:https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ppl.14607
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author Hongrui Wang
Al P. Kovaleski
Jason P. Londo
author_facet Hongrui Wang
Al P. Kovaleski
Jason P. Londo
Hongrui Wang
Al P. Kovaleski
Jason P. Londo
collection Wiley Open Access
contents Physiological and transcriptomic characterization of cold acclimation in endodormant grapevine under different temperature regimes Hongrui Wang Al P. Kovaleski Jason P. Londo Physiologia Plantarum Abstract It is essential for the survival of grapevines in cool climate viticultural regions where vines properly acclimate in late fall and early winter and develop freezing tolerance. Climate change‐associated abnormities in temperature during the dormant season, including oscillations between prolonged warmth in late fall and extreme cold in midwinter, impact cold acclimation and threaten the sustainability of the grape and wine industry. We conducted two experiments in controlled environment to investigate the impacts of different temperature regimes on cold acclimation ability in endodormant grapevine buds through a combination of freezing tolerance‐based physiological and RNA‐seq‐based transcriptomic monitoring. Results show that exposure to a constant temperature, whether warm (22 and 11°C), moderate (7°C), or cool (4 and 2°C) was insufficient for triggering cold acclimation and increasing freezing tolerance in dormant buds. However, when the same buds were exposed to temperature cycling (7±5°C), acclimation occurred, and freezing tolerance was increased by 5°C. We characterized the transcriptomic response of endodormant buds to high and low temperatures and temperature cycling and identified new potential roles for the ethylene pathway, starch and sugar metabolism, phenylpropanoid regulation, and protein metabolism in the genetic control of endodormancy maintenance. Despite clear evidence of temperature‐responsive transcription in endodormant buds, our current understanding of the genetic control of cold acclimation remains a challenge when generalizing across grapevine tissues and phenological stages. 10.1111/ppl.14607 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#am
doi_str_mv 10.1111/ppl.14607
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spellingShingle Physiological and transcriptomic characterization of cold acclimation in endodormant grapevine under different temperature regimes
Hongrui Wang
Al P. Kovaleski
Jason P. Londo
Physiologia Plantarum
Physiological and transcriptomic characterization of cold acclimation in endodormant grapevine under different temperature regimes Hongrui Wang Al P. Kovaleski Jason P. Londo Physiologia Plantarum Abstract It is essential for the survival of grapevines in cool climate viticultural regions where vines properly acclimate in late fall and early winter and develop freezing tolerance. Climate change‐associated abnormities in temperature during the dormant season, including oscillations between prolonged warmth in late fall and extreme cold in midwinter, impact cold acclimation and threaten the sustainability of the grape and wine industry. We conducted two experiments in controlled environment to investigate the impacts of different temperature regimes on cold acclimation ability in endodormant grapevine buds through a combination of freezing tolerance‐based physiological and RNA‐seq‐based transcriptomic monitoring. Results show that exposure to a constant temperature, whether warm (22 and 11°C), moderate (7°C), or cool (4 and 2°C) was insufficient for triggering cold acclimation and increasing freezing tolerance in dormant buds. However, when the same buds were exposed to temperature cycling (7±5°C), acclimation occurred, and freezing tolerance was increased by 5°C. We characterized the transcriptomic response of endodormant buds to high and low temperatures and temperature cycling and identified new potential roles for the ethylene pathway, starch and sugar metabolism, phenylpropanoid regulation, and protein metabolism in the genetic control of endodormancy maintenance. Despite clear evidence of temperature‐responsive transcription in endodormant buds, our current understanding of the genetic control of cold acclimation remains a challenge when generalizing across grapevine tissues and phenological stages. 10.1111/ppl.14607 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#am
title Physiological and transcriptomic characterization of cold acclimation in endodormant grapevine under different temperature regimes
topic Physiologia Plantarum
url https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ppl.14607