Long-term transcriptional memory in rice plants submitted to salt shock.

2020 
A first salt shock event alters transcriptional and physiological responses to a second event, being possible to identify 26 genes associated with long-term memory. Soil salinity significantly affects rice cultivation, resulting in large losses in growth and productivity. Studies report that a disturbing event can prepare the plant for a subsequent event through memory acquisition, involving physiological and molecular processes. Therefore, genes that provide altered responses in subsequent events define a category known as “memory genes”. In this work, the RNA-sequencing (RNA-Seq) technique was used to analyse the transcriptional profile of rice plants subjected to different salt shock events and to characterise genes associated with long-term memory. Plants subjected to recurrent salt shock showed differences in stomatal conductance, chlorophyll index, electrolyte leakage, and the number of differentially expressed genes (DEGs), and they had lower Na+/K+ ratios than plants that experienced only one stress event. Additionally, the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathways, and carbohydrate and amino acid-associated pathways were altered under all conditions. Memory genes can be classified according to their responses during the first event (+ or −) and the second shock event (+ or −), being possible to observe a larger number of transcripts for groups [+ /−] and [−/ +], genes characterised as “revised response.” This is the first long-term transcriptional memory study in rice plants under salt shock, providing new insights into the process of plant memory acquisition.
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