Publication details

Unraveling the process of thermoregulation during the seed development in Brassica napus

Authors

ROBERT BOISIVON Helene

Year of publication 2024
Type Conference abstract
MU Faculty or unit

Central European Institute of Technology

Citation
Description We observed that high temperatures above the optimum growth temperature resulted in the production of seeds with ruptured seed coats in Brassica napus cv Topas. This phenotype is associated with accelerated embryo development. However, the relationships between the three events – high temperature, embryo growth pace, and seed coat rupture - remain unclear. To investigate the occurrence of temperature-induced seed coat rupture, we combined detailed phenotyping approaches of oilseed rape seeds with transcriptomics, histology, immunolabelling, hormone and cell wall profiling. Our data suggest that high temperatures accelerate embryo growth, resulting in larger embryos but not larger seeds. Such large embryos exert a putative mechanical pressure on the seed coat cells, for which we observed a reduced cell layer thickness. The seed coat began to mature prematurely with the accumulation of demethylesterified pectin, possibly making the cell wall stiffer, which eventually ruptured. Our data present novel observations on the impact of high temperatures on seed development, tackling issues linked to Seed biomechanic features.

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