Clone history shapes Populus drought responses


Back to previous page
Authors: Raj, S; Brautigam, K; Hamanishi, ET; Wilkins, O; Thomas, BR; Schroeder, W; Mansfield, SD; Plant, AL; Campbell, MM
Year: 2011
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108: 12521-12526   Article Link (DOI)
Title: Clone history shapes Populus drought responses
Abstract: Just as animal monozygotic twins can experience different environmental conditions by being reared apart, individual genetically identical trees of the genus Populus can also be exposed to contrasting environmental conditions by being grown in different locations. As such, clonally propagated Populus trees provide an opportunity to interrogate the impact of individual environmental history on current response to environmental stimuli. To test the hypothesis that current responses to an environmental stimulus, drought, are contingent on environmental history, the transcriptome-level drought responses of three economically important hybrid genotypes-DN34 (Populus deltoides x Populus nigra), Walker [P. deltoides var. occidentalis x (Populus laurifolia x P. nigra)], and Okanese [Walker x (P. laurifolia x P. nigra)]-derived from two different locations were compared. Strikingly, differences in transcript abundance patterns in response to drought were based on differences in geographic origin of clones for two of the three genotypes. This observation was most pronounced for the genotypes with the longest time since establishment and last common propagation. Differences in genome-wide DNA methylation paralleled the transcriptome level trends, whereby the clones with the most divergent transcriptomes and clone history had the most marked differences in the extent of total DNA methylation, suggesting an epigenomic basis for the clone history-dependent transcriptome divergence. The data provide insights into the interplay between genotype and environment in the ecologically and economically important Populus genus, with implications for the industrial application of Populus trees and the evolution and persistence of these important tree species and their associated hybrids.
Back to previous page
 


Departmental members may update their publication list.