Polyploidy and plant resilience to environmental stresses: Molecular mechanisms and future applications.
Sobhanian H, Song WY, Soltis PS, Soltis DE, Chen S
Climate Adaptation
PubMedThe wheat in your bread, the strawberries in your garden, and the cotton in your clothes all carry extra chromosome sets that quietly help them survive heat waves and droughts — and scientists are now learning how to deliberately harness that survival trick to secure our food supply as climates shift.
Some plants naturally end up with extra copies of their entire genetic blueprint — think of it like having backup files for every instruction the plant needs. These 'backup' copies let the plant turn on extra defenses when things get tough, like drought or extreme heat. Scientists reviewed dozens of recent studies to understand exactly how this works, and they believe we can use this knowledge to breed tougher versions of our food crops.
Key Findings
Polyploid plants (those with more than two chromosome sets) consistently show greater stress tolerance than their diploid relatives across multiple types of environmental stress, including drought, heat, and salinity.
The genetic redundancy in polyploids leads to upregulation of stress-responsive genes and a process called neofunctionalization, where duplicate genes evolve new protective roles.
Epigenetic modifications — chemical tags that switch genes on or off without changing DNA — play a distinct and important role in how polyploids respond to stress compared with diploids.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Plants with extra sets of chromosomes — a common trait in crops like wheat and cotton — are naturally better at surviving drought, heat, and other stresses. This review explains why, and how scientists could use that knowledge to breed tougher, more climate-resilient crops.
Abstract Preview
Polyploidy, the condition of possessing more than two sets of chromosomes, is prevalent across the tree of life, particularly in green plants (Viridiplantae). It plays a crucial role in plant evolu...
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