scholarly journals Sphagnum peat moss thermotolerance is modulated by the microbiome

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alyssa A. Carrell ◽  
Travis J. Lawrence ◽  
Kristine Grace M. Cabugao ◽  
Dana L. Carper ◽  
Dale A. Pelletier ◽  
...  

AbstractSphagnum peat mosses is a major genus that is common to peatland ecosystems, where the species contribute to key biogeochemical processes including the uptake and long-term storage of atmospheric carbon. Warming threatens Sphagnum mosses and the peatland ecosystems in which they reside, potentially affecting the fate of vast global carbon stores. The competitive success of Sphagnum species is attributed in part to their symbiotic interactions with microbial associates. These microbes have the potential to rapidly respond to environmental change, thereby helping their host plants survive under changing environmental conditions. To investigate the importance of microbiome thermal origin on host plant thermotolerance, we mechanically separated the microbiome from Sphagnum plants residing in a whole-ecosystem warming study, transferred the component microbes to germ-free plants, and exposed the new hosts to temperature stress. Although warming decreased plant photosynthesis and growth in germ-free plants, the addition of a microbiome from a thermal origin that matched the experimental temperature completely restored plants to their pre-warming growth rates. Metagenome and metatranscriptome analyses revealed that warming altered microbial community structure, including the composition of key cyanobacteria symbionts, in a manner that induced the plant heat shock response, especially the Hsp70 family and jasmonic acid production. The plant heat shock response could be induced even without warming, suggesting that the warming-origin microbiome provided the host plant with thermal preconditioning. Together, our findings show that the microbiome can transmit thermotolerant phenotypes to host plants, providing a valuable strategy for rapidly responding to environmental change.

2018 ◽  
Vol 69 (2) ◽  
pp. 337-340
Author(s):  
Vlad Preluca ◽  
Bogdan Horatiu Serb ◽  
Sanda Marchian ◽  
Diter Atasie ◽  
Mihaela Cernusca Mitariu ◽  
...  

Heat shock inductors have potential as treatment for degenerative and protein misfolding diseases. Dimethyl-sulfoxide is widely used as a solvent in pharmacological screening tests and has been shown to have heat shock induction effects. Transgenic Tg (hsp70l:EGFP-HRAS_G12V)io3(AB) zebrafish larvae were exposed for 24 hours to dimethyl-sulfoxide in concentratios of 0.1-2%, and to moderate heat shock inductors pentoxifylline and tacrolimus. Positive controls were exposed to 35, 38 and 40�C for 20 min, and incubated for 24 h at 28�C. Heat shock response was measured by fluorescence microscopy and signal intensity quantification in FIJI. Dimethyl-sulfoxide caused a dose-dependant increase in fluorescent intensity, but significantly lower compared with exposure to 38 and 40�C. Pentoxifylline and tacrolimus induced a significantly higher increase in fluorescence compared with 0.5% dimethyl-sulfoxide. Thus, although dimethyl-sulfoxide has independent heat shock induction effects, concentrations of up to 0.5% are suitable for heat shock response screening tests.


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