TY - JOUR
T1 - Past trauma, better future
T2 - how stress memory shapes plant adaptation to drought
AU - Rahman, Md Mezanur
AU - Keya, Sanjida Sultana
AU - Bulle, Mallesham
AU - Ahsan, S. M.
AU - Rahman, Md Abiar
AU - Roni, Md Shyduzzaman
AU - Al Noor, Md Mahmud
AU - Hasan, Mehedi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing.
PY - 2025/5/15
Y1 - 2025/5/15
N2 - Can plants remember drought? Emerging evidence suggests that prior stress exposure leaves an epigenetic imprint, reprogramming plants for enhanced resilience. However, the stability and functional relevance of drought memory remain unresolved. This review synthesizes recent advances in epigenetic modifications, transcriptional reprogramming, and metabolic priming, critically assessing their roles in plant stress adaptation. DNA methylation dynamically reshapes chromatin landscapes, yet its transient nature questions its long-term inheritance. Histone modifications, particularly H3K9ac and H2Bub1, may encode stress signatures, enabling rapid transcriptional responses, whereas small RNAs fine-tune chromatin states to reinforce memory. Beyond epigenetics, physiological priming, including osmotic adjustments, antioxidant defenses, and hormonal crosstalk, introduces further complexity, yet its evolutionary advantage remains unclear. Root system plasticity may enhance drought resilience, but its metabolic trade-offs and epigenetic underpinnings are largely unexplored. A critical challenge is disentangling stable adaptive mechanisms from transient acclimatory shifts. We propose a framework for evaluating drought memory across temporal and generational scales and highlight the potential of precision genome editing to establish causality. By integrating multi-omics, gene editing, and field-based validation, this review aims to unlock the molecular blueprint of drought memory. Understanding these mechanisms is key to engineering climate-resilient crops, ensuring global food security in an era of increasing environmental uncertainty.
AB - Can plants remember drought? Emerging evidence suggests that prior stress exposure leaves an epigenetic imprint, reprogramming plants for enhanced resilience. However, the stability and functional relevance of drought memory remain unresolved. This review synthesizes recent advances in epigenetic modifications, transcriptional reprogramming, and metabolic priming, critically assessing their roles in plant stress adaptation. DNA methylation dynamically reshapes chromatin landscapes, yet its transient nature questions its long-term inheritance. Histone modifications, particularly H3K9ac and H2Bub1, may encode stress signatures, enabling rapid transcriptional responses, whereas small RNAs fine-tune chromatin states to reinforce memory. Beyond epigenetics, physiological priming, including osmotic adjustments, antioxidant defenses, and hormonal crosstalk, introduces further complexity, yet its evolutionary advantage remains unclear. Root system plasticity may enhance drought resilience, but its metabolic trade-offs and epigenetic underpinnings are largely unexplored. A critical challenge is disentangling stable adaptive mechanisms from transient acclimatory shifts. We propose a framework for evaluating drought memory across temporal and generational scales and highlight the potential of precision genome editing to establish causality. By integrating multi-omics, gene editing, and field-based validation, this review aims to unlock the molecular blueprint of drought memory. Understanding these mechanisms is key to engineering climate-resilient crops, ensuring global food security in an era of increasing environmental uncertainty.
KW - DNA methylation
KW - crop improvement
KW - drought resilience
KW - epigenetics
KW - histone modifications
KW - root adaptations
KW - small RNAs
KW - stress memory
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105005289198
U2 - 10.1071/FP24355
DO - 10.1071/FP24355
M3 - Review article
C2 - 40373187
AN - SCOPUS:105005289198
SN - 1445-4408
VL - 52
JO - Functional Plant Biology
JF - Functional Plant Biology
IS - 6
M1 - FP24355
ER -