Temperature and photoperiod changes affect cucumber sex expression by different epigenetic regulations

Abstract Background Cucumbers (Cucumis sativus) are known for their plasticity in sex expression. DNA methylation status determines gene activity but is susceptible to environmental condition changes. Thus, DNA methylation-based epigenetic regulation may at least partially account for the instabilit...

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Main Authors: Yun-Song Lai, Di Shen, Wei Zhang, Xiaohui Zhang, Yang Qiu, Haiping Wang, Xinxin Dou, Sigeng Li, Yuanqi Wu, Jiangping Song, Guanyu Ji, Xixiang Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-11-01
Series:BMC Plant Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12870-018-1490-3
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spelling doaj-7dae8890ff664923b3beb81bef8f54942020-11-25T01:22:41ZengBMCBMC Plant Biology1471-22292018-11-0118111310.1186/s12870-018-1490-3Temperature and photoperiod changes affect cucumber sex expression by different epigenetic regulationsYun-Song Lai0Di Shen1Wei Zhang2Xiaohui Zhang3Yang Qiu4Haiping Wang5Xinxin Dou6Sigeng Li7Yuanqi Wu8Jiangping Song9Guanyu Ji10Xixiang Li11Institute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesInstitute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesInstitute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesInstitute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesInstitute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesInstitute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesInstitute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesInstitute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesInstitute of Pomology & Olericulture, Sichuan Agricultural UniversityInstitute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesInstitute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesInstitute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesAbstract Background Cucumbers (Cucumis sativus) are known for their plasticity in sex expression. DNA methylation status determines gene activity but is susceptible to environmental condition changes. Thus, DNA methylation-based epigenetic regulation may at least partially account for the instability of cucumber sex expression. Do temperature and photoperiod that are the two most important environmental factors have equal effect on cucumber sex expression by similar epigenetic regulation mechanism? To answer this question, we did a two-factor experiment of temperature and photoperiod and generated methylome and transcriptome data from cucumber shoot apices. Results The seasonal change in the femaleness of a cucumber core germplasm collection was investigated over five consecutive years. As a result, 71.3% of the 359 cucumber accessions significantly decreased their femaleness in early autumn when compared with spring. High temperature and long-day photoperiod treatments, which mimic early autumn conditions, are both unfavorable for female flower formation, and temperature is the predominant factor. High temperatures and long-day treatments both predominantly resulted in hypermethylation compared to demethylation, and temperature effect was decisive. The targeted cytosines shared in high-temperature and long-day photoperiod treatment showed the same change in DNA methylation level. Moreover, differentially expressed TEs (DETs) and the predicted epiregulation sites were clustered across chromosomes, and importantly, these sites were reproducible among different treatments. Essentially, the photoperiod treatment preferentially and significantly influenced flower development processes, while temperature treatment produced stronger responses from phytohormone-pathway-related genes. Cucumber AGAMOUS was likely epicontrolled exclusively by photoperiod while CAULIFLOWER A and CsACO 3 were likely epicontrolled by both photoperiod and temperature. Conclusions Seasonal change of sex expression is a germplasm-wide phenomenon in cucumbers. High temperature and long-day photoperiod might have the same effect on the methylome via the same mechanism of gene-TE interaction but resulted in different epicontrol sites that account for different mechanisms between temperature- and photoperiod-dependent sex expression changes.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12870-018-1490-3Cucumber germplasmSex expressionTemperaturePhotoperiodDNA methylation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yun-Song Lai
Di Shen
Wei Zhang
Xiaohui Zhang
Yang Qiu
Haiping Wang
Xinxin Dou
Sigeng Li
Yuanqi Wu
Jiangping Song
Guanyu Ji
Xixiang Li
spellingShingle Yun-Song Lai
Di Shen
Wei Zhang
Xiaohui Zhang
Yang Qiu
Haiping Wang
Xinxin Dou
Sigeng Li
Yuanqi Wu
Jiangping Song
Guanyu Ji
Xixiang Li
Temperature and photoperiod changes affect cucumber sex expression by different epigenetic regulations
BMC Plant Biology
Cucumber germplasm
Sex expression
Temperature
Photoperiod
DNA methylation
author_facet Yun-Song Lai
Di Shen
Wei Zhang
Xiaohui Zhang
Yang Qiu
Haiping Wang
Xinxin Dou
Sigeng Li
Yuanqi Wu
Jiangping Song
Guanyu Ji
Xixiang Li
author_sort Yun-Song Lai
title Temperature and photoperiod changes affect cucumber sex expression by different epigenetic regulations
title_short Temperature and photoperiod changes affect cucumber sex expression by different epigenetic regulations
title_full Temperature and photoperiod changes affect cucumber sex expression by different epigenetic regulations
title_fullStr Temperature and photoperiod changes affect cucumber sex expression by different epigenetic regulations
title_full_unstemmed Temperature and photoperiod changes affect cucumber sex expression by different epigenetic regulations
title_sort temperature and photoperiod changes affect cucumber sex expression by different epigenetic regulations
publisher BMC
series BMC Plant Biology
issn 1471-2229
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Abstract Background Cucumbers (Cucumis sativus) are known for their plasticity in sex expression. DNA methylation status determines gene activity but is susceptible to environmental condition changes. Thus, DNA methylation-based epigenetic regulation may at least partially account for the instability of cucumber sex expression. Do temperature and photoperiod that are the two most important environmental factors have equal effect on cucumber sex expression by similar epigenetic regulation mechanism? To answer this question, we did a two-factor experiment of temperature and photoperiod and generated methylome and transcriptome data from cucumber shoot apices. Results The seasonal change in the femaleness of a cucumber core germplasm collection was investigated over five consecutive years. As a result, 71.3% of the 359 cucumber accessions significantly decreased their femaleness in early autumn when compared with spring. High temperature and long-day photoperiod treatments, which mimic early autumn conditions, are both unfavorable for female flower formation, and temperature is the predominant factor. High temperatures and long-day treatments both predominantly resulted in hypermethylation compared to demethylation, and temperature effect was decisive. The targeted cytosines shared in high-temperature and long-day photoperiod treatment showed the same change in DNA methylation level. Moreover, differentially expressed TEs (DETs) and the predicted epiregulation sites were clustered across chromosomes, and importantly, these sites were reproducible among different treatments. Essentially, the photoperiod treatment preferentially and significantly influenced flower development processes, while temperature treatment produced stronger responses from phytohormone-pathway-related genes. Cucumber AGAMOUS was likely epicontrolled exclusively by photoperiod while CAULIFLOWER A and CsACO 3 were likely epicontrolled by both photoperiod and temperature. Conclusions Seasonal change of sex expression is a germplasm-wide phenomenon in cucumbers. High temperature and long-day photoperiod might have the same effect on the methylome via the same mechanism of gene-TE interaction but resulted in different epicontrol sites that account for different mechanisms between temperature- and photoperiod-dependent sex expression changes.
topic Cucumber germplasm
Sex expression
Temperature
Photoperiod
DNA methylation
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12870-018-1490-3
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