WHIRLY proteins maintain seed longevity by effects on seed oxygen signalling during imbibition

Rachel E. Taylor, Wanda Waterworth, Christopher E West, Christine H. Foyer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

The WHIRLY (WHY) family of DNA/RNA binding proteins fulfil multiple but poorly characterised functions in plants. We analysed WHY protein functions in the Arabidopsis Atwhy1, Atwhy3, Atwhy1why3 single and double mutants and wild type controls. The Atwhy3 and Atwhy1why3 double mutants showed a significant delay in flowering, having more siliques per plant but with fewer seeds per silique than the wild type. While germination was similar in the unaged high-quality seeds of all lines, significant decreases in vigour and viability were observed in the aged mutant seeds compared with the wild type. Imbibition of unaged high-quality seeds was characterised by large increases in transcripts that encode proteins involved in oxygen sensing and responses to hypoxia. Seed aging resulted in a disruption of the imbibition-induced transcriptome profile such that transcripts encoding RNA metabolism and processing became the most abundant components of the imbibition signature. The imbibition-related profile of the Atwhy1why3 mutant seeds, was characterised by decreased expression of hypoxia-related and oxygen metabolism genes even in the absence of aging. Seed aging further decreased the abundance of hypoxia-related and oxygen metabolism transcripts relative to the wild type. These findings suggest that the WHY1 and WHY3 proteins regulate the imbibition-induced responses to oxygen availability and hypoxia. Loss of WHY1 and WHY3 functions decreases the ability of Arabidopsis seeds to resist the adverse effects of seed aging.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)941-956
Number of pages16
JournalBiochemical Journal
Volume480
Issue number13
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Jul 2023

Keywords

  • ageing
  • climate change
  • germination
  • heat shock proteins
  • longevity
  • seeds

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'WHIRLY proteins maintain seed longevity by effects on seed oxygen signalling during imbibition'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this