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  4. Design of an Arabidopsis thaliana reporter line to detect heat-sensing and signaling mutants
 
research article

Design of an Arabidopsis thaliana reporter line to detect heat-sensing and signaling mutants

Guihur, Anthony
•
Bourgine, Baptiste
•
Rebeaud, Mathieu E.  
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June 8, 2023
Plant Methods

BackgroundGlobal warming is a major challenge for plant survival and growth. Understanding the molecular mechanisms by which higher plants sense and adapt to upsurges in the ambient temperature is essential for developing strategies to enhance plant tolerance to heat stress. Here, we designed a heat-responsive Arabidopsis thaliana reporter line that allows an in-depth investigation of the mechanisms underlying the accumulation of protective heat-shock proteins (HSPs) in response to high temperature.MethodsA transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana reporter line named "Heat-Inducible Bioluminescence And Toxicity" (HIBAT) was designed to express from a conditional heat-inducible promoter, a fusion gene encoding for nanoluciferase and d-amino acid oxidase, whose expression is toxic in the presence of d-valine. HIBAT seedlings were exposed to different heat treatments in presence or absence of d-valine and analyzed for survival rate, bioluminescence and HSP gene expression.ResultsWhereas at 22 degrees C, HIBAT seedlings grew unaffected by d-valine, and all survived iterative heat treatments without d-valine, 98% died following heat treatments on d-valine. The HSP17.3B promoter was highly specific to heat as it remained unresponsive to various plant hormones, Flagellin, H2O2, osmotic stress and high salt. RNAseq analysis of heat-treated HIBAT seedlings showed a strong correlation with expression profiles of two wild type lines, confirming that HIBAT does not significantly differ from its Col-0 parent. Using HIBAT, a forward genetic screen revealed candidate loss-of-function mutants, apparently defective either at accumulating HSPs at high temperature or at repressing HSP accumulation at non-heat-shock temperatures.ConclusionHIBAT is a valuable candidate tool to identify Arabidopsis mutants defective in the response to high temperature stress. It opens new avenues for future research on the regulation of HSP expression and for understanding the mechanisms of plant acquired thermotolerance.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1186/s13007-023-01033-x
Web of Science ID

WOS:001002667900001

Author(s)
Guihur, Anthony
Bourgine, Baptiste
Rebeaud, Mathieu E.  
Goloubinoff, Pierre
Date Issued

2023-06-08

Published in
Plant Methods
Volume

19

Issue

1

Start page

56

Subjects

Biochemical Research Methods

•

Plant Sciences

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Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

•

Plant Sciences

•

global warming

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nanoluciferase

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d-amino acid oxidase

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heat-shock proteins

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heat-stress

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hsp20

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hsp101

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hsp17

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3b

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chaperones

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heat-inducible promoter

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agrobacterium-mediated transformation

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rna-seq data

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molecular chaperones

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shock proteins

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transcription factors

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denatured proteins

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quality-control

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floral dip

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expression

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membrane

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBS  
Available on Infoscience
June 19, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/198344
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