Chilling-responsive DEMETER-LIKE DNA demethylase mediates in poplar bud break

Plant Cell Environ. 2017 Oct;40(10):2236-2249. doi: 10.1111/pce.13019. Epub 2017 Aug 30.

Abstract

Annual dormancy-growth cycle is a developmental and physiological process essential for the survival of deciduous trees in temperate and boreal forests. Seasonal control of shoot growth in woody perennials requires specific genetic programmes responding to environmental signals. The environmental-controlled mechanisms that regulate the shift between winter dormancy and the growth-promoting genetic programmes are still unknown. Here, we show that dynamics in genomic DNA methylation levels are involved in the regulation of dormancy-growth cycle in poplar. The reactivation of growth in the apical shoot during bud break process in spring is preceded by a progressive reduction of genomic DNA methylation in apex tissue. The induction in apex tissue of a chilling-dependent poplar DEMETER-LIKE 10 (PtaDML10) DNA demethylase precedes shoot growth reactivation. Transgenic poplars showing downregulation of PtaDML8/10 caused delayed bud break. Genome-wide transcriptome and methylome analysis and data mining revealed that the gene targets of DEMETER-LIKE-dependent DNA demethylation are genetically associated with bud break. These data point to a chilling-dependent DEMETER-like DNA demethylase mechanisms being involved in the shift from winter dormancy to a condition that precedes shoot apical vegetative growth in poplar.

Keywords: DEMETER; DNA demethylases; DNA methylation; bud break; poplar; winter dormancy.

MeSH terms

  • Cold Temperature*
  • DNA Demethylation
  • Gene Expression Profiling
  • Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental
  • Gene Expression Regulation, Plant
  • Genes, Plant
  • Plant Proteins / genetics
  • Plant Proteins / metabolism*
  • Plant Shoots / enzymology
  • Plant Shoots / genetics
  • Plant Shoots / growth & development*
  • Populus / enzymology*
  • Populus / genetics
  • Populus / physiology*

Substances

  • Plant Proteins