Comparative Transcriptomics Reveals Epigenetic and Transcriptional Regulatory Genes Associated with Drought Stress Memory in Winter Wheat.
Kambona CM, Schneider M, He F, Léon J, Mason AS
Climate Adaptation
Every loaf of bread you buy depends on wheat surviving droughts that are becoming more frequent, and this research reveals the molecular on/off switches that could be targeted to breed far more resilient varieties.
Scientists discovered that wheat plants exposed to drought once perform better when drought hits a second time, as if the plant stored a memory of the stress. Two different wheat varieties — one naturally tough in dry conditions and one more vulnerable — each use their own set of internal molecular switches to record that memory. Knowing which switches matter in each type could help plant breeders engineer wheat that recovers faster and yields more grain even as dry spells become more common.
Key Findings
Seedlings of both drought-tolerant ('Intro') and drought-sensitive ('Sonalika') wheat genotypes showed measurably enhanced resilience when re-exposed to drought after a prior drought experience, confirming functional stress memory in both.
The tolerant 'Intro' variety stored drought memory via genes linked to the H3K36me3 histone modification, while the sensitive 'Sonalika' relied on genes tied to H3K9ac and H3K14ac — indicating genotype-specific epigenetic strategies.
'Sonalika' demonstrated functional drought memory entirely without canonical DNA-methylation-based chromatin marks, revealing that alternative regulatory pathways can compensate and complicating simple models of epigenetic stress memory.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Wheat plants can 'remember' past droughts at a molecular level, and this stress memory helps them bounce back faster when drought strikes again — with drought-tolerant and drought-sensitive varieties using distinctly different genetic switches to store that memory.
Abstract Preview
Wheat is a staple crop vital to global food security, yet its productivity is increasingly threatened by drought stress. The extent to which contrasting wheat genotypes exhibit stress memory, and h...
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