Epigenetics – The Molecular Tool in Understanding Abiotic Stress Response in Plants
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acquired memory are also known as transgenerational memory, transgenera
tional consequences, transgenerational inheritance is described as the ability
to pass on information from one generation to the next, the ability of an
organism to “remember” its surroundings at the molecular level, resulting
in a change in phenotype of the progeny (Tricker, 2015). The term priming
was coined to describe how mild stress could induce plant stress responses,
allowing them to respond faster and stronger when the stress recurs. In
general, being able to recall previous molecular experiences and use this
preserved information to adjust to new environments is life-saving when
repeated biotic and abiotic challenges occur. The phenomenon of priming
of organismal stress responses explains how a plant is modified and gets
ready for subsequent stress exposure (a ‘triggering stress cue’) by a tempo
rally restricted environmental stimulation (a “priming stress cue”) (Lämke
& Bäurle, 2017). Epigenetic regulation is closely linked to the formation
of stress memory (Friedrich et al., 2019; Lämke & Bäurle, 2017). Stress-
induced chromatin alterations might influence particular regions or occur
genome-wide and are frequently linked to transcriptional regulation. Most of
these alterations occur only during the stress exposure, both the expression
as well as chromatin states usually return to pre-stress levels quickly. While
other modifications cause novel chromatin structures and altered expression
of stress-responsive genes, to last longer post-stress exposure prepares an
organism for developmental options or even more efficient defense. Plants’
future responses towards stress may be altered by prior exposure to stress,
resulting in quicker and/or extreme responses, suggesting the plants have a
type of “stress memory.” These epigenetic changes persist or are even trans
mitted in the next progeny (Pecinka & Mittelsten Scheid, 2012). Arabidopsis
show transcriptional stress memory after several exposures to drought stress,
as evidenced by the rise in transcription rate and increased transcript amount
in a group comprising stress-response genes (trainable genes). Accumula
tion of H3K4me3 on “trainable genes” is more than “non-trainable genes,”
implying H3K4me3 can operate like a persistent epigenetic impression
linked to transcriptional memory. Trainable genes generate transcripts to the
baseline during recovery, i.e., watered condition, however they are linked
with unusually high amounts of H3K4me3 along with Ser5P polymerase II,
representing the RNA polymerase II is paused (Ding et al., 2012). H3K4me3
and H3K27me3 co-occur but functions independently in the transcription
of memory genes of dehydration stress-response. Whereas H3K27me3
does not work as an epigenetic memory imprint of the dehydration stress-
responsive genes (Liu et al., 2014). Heat Shock Proteins (HSPs) like HSP21,