1. Home
  2. News & Publications
  3. Research News

Jul. 6, 2018 Press Release Biology

Summer fun: how plants beat the heat

Researchers at the RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science in Japan have discovered a gene in plants that helps protect them from excessive heat. Published in the scientific journal Plant Cell, the study shows that the newly found gene prevents the destabilization of chloroplast membranes that occurs at very high temperatures.

We all know how uncomfortable it is to be stuck outside on a sweltering hot day. Now, imagine how bad it would be if you were a soybean or tomato plant without any chance of moving inside. Eventually your leaves might become bleached of color due to chloroplast membrane damage, and if you did not get any relief, you might die. Fortunately for plants, they do have a natural defense against this type of stress that involves modifying plant fats that make up chloroplast membranes. When heat causes chloroplast membranes to destabilize, polyunsaturated fatty acids are removed from the membrane lipids, which stabilizes the membranes. The team at RIKEN found the gene responsible for this process, and they did so rather quickly because of their innovative approach.

“We hypothesized that breaking down of chloroplastic lipids would be controlled by some unidentified genes that encode lipases localized in chloroplasts and which are induced by heat stress,” explains first author Yasuhiro Higashi. “We used several public omics databases to isolate candidate genes involved in heat-stress responses, predict where the genes are expressed in the plants, and to find gene homologues in several plants species.”

Lipases are proteins that break apart lipids. A transcriptome analysis identified candidate lipase genes, and proteomics databases were able to narrow down the search by predicting which genes were localized in chloroplasts. To test the most likely candidate gene—which they subsequently named Heat Inducible Lipase 1 (HIL1)—they created a hil1 mutant Arabidopsis plant in which the gene was disrupted, and compared mutant responses to heat stress with those of normal plants.

They found that the mutant plants were more sensitive to heat, meaning that their condition worsened more than control plants in extreme heat and their survival rate was much lower. Closer examination showed that membrane remodeling in the mutant chloroplasts was partially disrupted, and not all polyunsaturated fatty acids were removed from a key glycerolipid.

These experiments were performed in the plant Arabidopsis, the most common plant used in plant research. The team also did a gene coexpression analysis using public microarray data, which revealed a conserved network associated with HIL1 in several plant species, including rice, tomatoes, corn, and soybeans. “We are interested in discovering the function of the HIL1 homologous genes in major crop species,” notes Higashi. “We hope our knowledge about HIL1 might aid in the development of new heat stress-tolerant plant varieties, which could help improve crop yield in hot environments.”

Team leader Kazuki Saito is also looking at the big picture. “This natural response to heat is not new, but understanding how it works is a step forward in fighting global warming,” he says. “Our study certainly contributes to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) set by the UN in 2015, in particular, goals 2 and 13—Climate Action and Zero Hunger.”

Reference

  • Yasuhiro Higashi, Yozo Okazaki, Kouji Takano, Fumiyoshi Myouga, Kazuo Shinozaki, Eva Knoch, Atsushi Fukushima and Kazuki Saito, "HEAT INDUCIBLE LIPASE1 remodels chloroplastic monogalactosyldiacylglycerol by liberating α-linolenic acid in Arabidopsis leaves under heat stress", The Plant Cell, 10.1105/tpc.18.00347

Contact

Group Director
Kazuki Saito
Metabolomics Research Group
RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science

Adam Phillips
RIKEN International Affairs Division
Tel: +81-(0)48-462-1225 / Fax: +81-(0)48-463-3687
Email: pr@riken.jp

photo of hil1 and wild type plants after the heat shock test

The effects of heat shock on hil1 mutants, wildtype (wt) plants, and hil1/HIL1 complements (#3, #6, #9).

Fourteen-day-old plants were exposed to heat shock. Note: the hil1 mutants faired poorly. The heat shock protocol was: treatment at 38°C (100.4°F) for 2 hours, 22°C (71.6°F) for 1 hour, and 45°C (113°F) for 165 or 180 minutes, followed by recovery at 22°C (71.6°F) for 7 days.
photo of plants grown without heat shock

The control condition

All plants grown continuously at 22°C (71.6°F). Note: all plants appear normal.

Top