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Climate change and associated extreme weather events are a threat not only for agricultural
yields but the plant kingdom in general. Therefore, there is a great necessity to better
understand the plants' intrinsic mechanisms to combat heat stress. The plant heat stress
response already has been investigated in many studies, including the role of HSFA1
transcription factors as the central regulators. Other aspects such as the initial perception of
heat and the role of heat-induced changes in plant metabolism are rather unknown.
In this thesis, the natural variation of 250 different accessions of Arabidopsis thaliana was
investigated regarding the temperature-dependent accumulation of raffinose and
triacylglycerols. A connection between these phenotypes and respective genotypes was
established using genome-wide association studies. As a result, the candidate gene
TREHALOSE-6-PHOSPHATE SYNTHASE 1 (TPS1), was identified. Enzymatic TPS1 is responsible
for the synthesis of trehalose 6-phosphate (T6P), which serves as an indicator and regulator
of sucrose homeostasis.
Subsequent analyses using tps1 tilling mutants demonstrated a link between T6P metabolism
and an increased accumulation of various soluble carbohydrates and starch, including
raffinose both under control conditions and during heat exposure. Furthermore, the mutant
lines displayed enhanced thermotolerance and survival rates following long-term heat stress.
Transcriptome analyses, however, did not show any difference in the regulation of canonical
heat stress-associated genes. Instead, genes related to photosynthesis were overrepresented
among the differentially upregulated genes in tps1 tilling lines during heat exposure. In this
work, a direct connection of T6P signaling, sucrose homeostasis, and thermotolerance is
shown for the first time.
In a second project, two Arabidopsis thaliana accessions (Oberursel-0, accession ID: 7276;
Nieps-0, accession ID: 7268) showing distinct capacities to acquire short-term
thermotolerance were compared to identify the putative causative regulators or mechanisms
that lead to the different levels of thermotolerance.
An examination of the transcriptomes of 7268 and 7276 showed that several hundreds of
genes were already differentially regulated within 10 minutes of exposure to 32 °C or 34 °C.
Among these, several genes associated with sulfur metabolism were more highly induced in
the more thermotolerant accession 7268. However, experimental as well as genetic
manipulation of sulfur availability and metabolism did not result in altered thermotolerance.
In addition to sulfur-related genes, most of the canonical heat stress-associated genes were
more highly expressed in 7268 than in 7276. While we could not identify a causative regulator
or mechanism of differential thermotolerances, the data strongly suggests that 7268 either
has a higher overall sensitivity, i.e., the heat stress response is initiated at lower temperatures,
or stronger overall heat stress response when exposed to a certain elevated temperature.
Plants are exposed to high temperature, especially during hot summer days. Temperatures are typically lowest in the morning and reach a maximum in the afternoon. Plants can tolerate and survive short-term heat stress even on hot summer days. A. thaliana seedlings have been reported to tolerate higher temperatures for different time periods, a phenomenon that has been termed basal thermotolerance. In addition, plants have the inherent capacity to acclimate to otherwise lethal temperatures. Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings acclimate at moderately elevated temperatures between 32–38° C. During heat acclimation, a genetically programmed heat shock response (HSR) is triggered that is characterized by a rapid activation of heat shock transcription factors (HSFs), which trigger a massive accumulation of heat shock proteins that are chiefly involved in protein folding and protection.
Although the HSF-triggered heat-shock response is well characterized, little is known about the metabolic adjustments during heat stress. The aim of this work was to get more insight into heat-responsive metabolism and its importance for thermotolerance.
In order to identify the response of metabolites to elevated temperatures, global metabolite profiles of heat-acclimated and control seedlings were compared. Untargeted metabolite analyses revealed that levels of polyunsaturated triacylglycerols (TG) rapidly increase during heat acclimation. TG accumulation was found to be temperature-dependent in a temperature range from 32–50° C (optimum at 42° C). Heat-induced TG accumulation was localized in extra-chloroplastic compartments by chloroplast isolation as well as by fluorescence microscopy of A. thaliana cell cultures.
Analysis of mutants deficient in all four HSFA1 master regulator genes or the HSFA2 gene revealed that TG accumulation occurred independently to HSF. Moreover, the TG response was not limited to heat stress since drought and salt stress (but not short-term osmotic, cold and high light stress) also triggered an accumulation of TGs.
In order to reveal the origin of TG synthesis, lipid analysis was carried out. Heat-induced accumulation of TGs does not derive from massive de novo fatty acid (FA) synthesis. On the other hand, lipidomic analyses of A. thaliana seedlings indicated that polyunsaturated FA from thylakoid galactolipids are incorporated into cytosolic TGs during heat stress. This was verified by lipidomic analyses of A. thaliana fad7/8 transgenic seedlings, which displayed altered FA compositions of plastidic lipids. In addition, wild type A. thaliana seedlings displayed a rapid conversion of plastidic monogalactosyldiacylglycerols (MGDGs) into oligogalactolipids, acylated MGDGs and diacylglycerols (DGs). For TG synthesis, DG requires a FA from the acyl CoA pool or phosphatidylcholine (PC). Seedlings deficient in phospholipid:diacylglycerol acyltransferase1 (PDAT1) were unable to accumulate TGs following heat stress; thus PC appears to be the major FA donor for TGs during heat treatment. These results suggest that TG and oligogalactolipid accumulation during heat stress is driven by post-translationally regulated plastid lipid metabolism.
TG accumulation following heat stress was found to increase basal thermotolerance. Pdat1 mutant seedlings were more sensitive to severe heat stress without prior acclimatization, as revealed by a more dramatic decline of the maximum efficiency of PSII and lower survival rate compared to wild type seedlings. In contrast, tgd1 mutants over-accumulating TGs and oligogalactolipids displayed a higher basal thermotolerance compared to wild type seedlings. These results therefore suggest that accumulation of TGs increases thermotolerance in addition to the genetically encoded heat shock response.