Imperial Valley Press

Research pointing way to heat-tolerant plants

- By JULES BERNSTEIN UC Riverside

RIVERSIDE — By 2050 global warming could reduce crop yields by one-third. UC Riverside researcher­s have identified a gene that could put the genie back in the bottle.

Warmer temperatur­es signal to plants that summer is coming. Anticipati­ng less water, they flower early then lack the energy to produce more seeds, so crop yields are lower. This is problemati­c as the world’s population is expected to balloon to 10 billion, with much less food to eat.

“We need plants that can endure warmer temperatur­es, have a longer time to flower and a longer growth period,” said UCR botany and plant sciences professor Meng Chen. “But, to be able to modify plants’ temperatur­e responses, you first have to understand how they work. So, that’s why identifyin­g this gene that enables heat response is so important.” The work that Chen and his colleagues did to uncover the heat-sensing gene was published this week in the journal Nature Communicat­ions. It is the second gene they’ve found involved in temperatur­e sensing.

They located the first gene, called HEMERA, two years ago. Then they did an experiment to see if they could identify other genes involved in controllin­g the temperatur­e-sensing process.

Ordinarily, plants react to shifts of even a few degrees in weather. For this experiment, the team began with a mutant Arabidopsi­s plant completely insensitiv­e to temperatur­e, and they modified it to once again become reactive.

Examining the genes of this twice-mutated plant revealed the new gene, RCB, whose products work closely with HEMERA to stabilize the heat-sensing function. “If you knock out either gene, your plant is no longer sensitive to temperatur­e,” Chen said.

Both HEMERA and RCB are required to regulate the abundance of a group of master gene regulators that serve multiple functions, reacting to temperatur­e as well as light, and turning plants green.

 ?? PHOTO MENG CHEN, UC RIVERSIDE ?? Drastic difference­s in mutant Arabidopsi­s seedlings grown at warm temperatur­es.
PHOTO MENG CHEN, UC RIVERSIDE Drastic difference­s in mutant Arabidopsi­s seedlings grown at warm temperatur­es.

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