A systems genetic analysis identifies putative mechanisms and candidate genes regulating vessel traits in poplar wood

Front Plant Sci. 2024 May 29:15:1375506. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1375506. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Wood is the water conducting tissue of tree stems. Like most angiosperm trees, poplar wood contains water-conducting vessel elements whose functional properties affect water transport and growth rates, as well as susceptibility to embolism and hydraulic failure during water stress and drought. Here we used a unique hybrid poplar pedigree carrying genomically characterized chromosomal insertions and deletions to undertake a systems genomics analysis of vessel traits. We assayed gene expression in wood forming tissues from clonal replicates of genotypes covering dosage quantitative trait loci with insertions and deletions, genotypes with extreme vessel trait phenotypes, and control genotypes. A gene co-expression analysis was used to assign genes to modules, which were then used in integrative analyses to identify modules associated with traits, to identify putative molecular and cellular processes associated with each module, and finally to identify candidate genes using multiple criteria including dosage responsiveness. These analyses identified known processes associated with vessel traits including stress response, abscisic acid and cell wall biosynthesis, and in addition identified previously unexplored processes including cell cycle and protein ubiquitination. We discuss our findings relative to component processes contributing to vessel trait variation including signaling, cell cycle, cell expansion, and cell differentiation.

Keywords: drought; forest management; forest tree; populus; water transport; wood development.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. FR was supported by NSF fellowship 1650042. We acknowledge funding from DOE BER Interagency Agreement Number 89243022SSC000098 to AG. Other funding for this study was provided by US Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station.