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Research Project
Effect of environmental stresses on rice epigenome.
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Salt tolerant and sensitive rice varieties display differential methylome flexibility under salt stress
Publication . Ferreira, Liliana J.; Azevedo, Vanessa; Maroco, João; Oliveira, Maria Margarida; Santos, Ana Paula
DNA methylation has been referred as an important player in plant genomic responses to
environmental stresses but correlations between the methylome plasticity and specific traits
of interest are still far from being understood. In this study, we inspected global DNA methylation
levels in salt tolerant and sensitive rice varieties upon salt stress imposition. Global
DNA methylation was quantified using the 5-methylcytosine (5mC) antibody and an ELISAbased
technique, which is an affordable and quite pioneer assay in plants, and in situ imaging
of methylation sites in interphase nuclei of tissue sections. Variations of global DNA
methylation levels in response to salt stress were tissue- and genotype-dependent. We
show a connection between a higher ability of DNA methylation adjustment levels and salt
stress tolerance. The salt-tolerant rice variety Pokkali was remarkable in its ability to quickly
relax DNA methylation in response to salt stress. In spite of the same tendency for reduction
of global methylation under salinity, in the salt-sensitive rice variety IR29 such reduction
was not statistically supported. In ‘Pokkali’, the salt stress-induced demethylation may be
linked to active demethylation due to increased expression of DNA demethylases under
salt stress. In ‘IR29’, the induction of both DNA demethylases and methyltransferases may
explain the lower plasticity of DNA methylation. We further show that mutations for epigenetic
regulators affected specific phenotypic parameters related to salinity tolerance, such
as the root length and biomass. This work emphasizes the role of differential methylome
flexibility between salt tolerant and salt sensitive rice varieties as an important player in salt
stress tolerance, reinforcing the need to better understand the connection between epigenetic
networks and plant responses to environmental stresses.
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Funding agency
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
Funding programme
3599-PPCDT
Funding Award Number
PTDC/BIA-BCM/111645/2009