Thermal stress accelerates Arabidopsis thaliana mutation rate

  1. Nicholas P. Harberd1
  1. 1Department of Plant Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3RB, United Kingdom;
  2. 2State Key Laboratory of Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, College of Life Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, 310058 China;
  3. 3Faculty of Sciences, University of Geneva, Geneva 1211, Switzerland;
  4. 4Centre for Cell and Developmental Biology, State Key Laboratory of Agrobiotechnology, School of Life Sciences, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, New Territories, Hong Kong, China;
  5. 5Department of Plant Physiology, Umeå Plant Science Centre, Umeå University, SE-901 87 Umeå, Sweden;
  6. 6Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EA, United Kingdom;
  7. 7Department of Biology, Syed Babar Ali School of Science and Engineering, Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), DHA, Lahore 54792, Pakistan
  • Corresponding authors: eric.belfield{at}plants.ox.ac.uk, aziz.mithani{at}lums.edu.pk, nicholas.harberd{at}plants.ox.ac.uk
  • Abstract

    Mutations are the source of both genetic diversity and mutational load. However, the effects of increasing environmental temperature on plant mutation rates and relative impact on specific mutational classes (e.g., insertion/deletion [indel] vs. single nucleotide variant [SNV]) are unknown. This topic is important because of the poorly defined effects of anthropogenic global temperature rise on biological systems. Here, we show the impact of temperature increase on Arabidopsis thaliana mutation, studying whole genome profiles of mutation accumulation (MA) lineages grown for 11 successive generations at 29°C. Whereas growth of A. thaliana at standard temperature (ST; 23°C) is associated with a mutation rate of 7 × 10−9 base substitutions per site per generation, growth at stressful high temperature (HT; 29°C) is highly mutagenic, increasing the mutation rate to 12 × 10−9. SNV frequency is approximately two- to threefold higher at HT than at ST, and HT-growth causes an ∼19- to 23-fold increase in indel frequency, resulting in a disproportionate increase in indels (vs. SNVs). Most HT-induced indels are 1–2 bp in size and particularly affect homopolymeric or dinucleotide A or T stretch regions of the genome. HT-induced indels occur disproportionately in nucleosome-free regions, suggesting that much HT-induced mutational damage occurs during cell-cycle phases when genomic DNA is packaged into nucleosomes. We conclude that stressful experimental temperature increases accelerate plant mutation rates and particularly accelerate the rate of indel mutation. Increasing environmental temperatures are thus likely to have significant mutagenic consequences for plants growing in the wild and may, in particular, add detrimentally to mutational load.

    Footnotes

    • Received December 3, 2019.
    • Accepted October 28, 2020.

    This article is distributed exclusively by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the first six months after the full-issue publication date (see http://genome.cshlp.org/site/misc/terms.xhtml). After six months, it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

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