technical paper
Heat stress transcription factors and splicing regulators: brothers in arms to survive heat
keywords:
rna splicing
heat stress response
transcription
Plants experience heat stress (HS) at temperatures where growth and development are negatively affected. Survival from HS is dependent on the upregulation of hundreds of genes with protective functions for protein and cellular homeostasis such as heat shock proteins (HSPs). The majority of these genes are regulated by the family of HS transcription factors (HSF). In tomato, HsfA1a is the master regulator of HS response. Additional HSFs, such as HsfA2 and HsfA7 are important for HS acclimation and memory, the ability of a plant to store the information of a past HS incident and optimize the response in case of a new one. Class B HSFs act as co-activators and co-repressors and regulate the intensity and the timely attenuation of the stress response to optimize recovery. In addition to transcription, RNA splicing is another important mechanism for regulation of gene expression under HS conditions. Our results suggest that thermotolerance requires the coordinated but also independent activity of transcription factors and splicing regulators to optimize the cellular reprogramming required for survival under high temperatures.