Strike at the root: exploring the transferability of heat stress tolerance in tomatoes by reciprocal grafting
Robin T. Biermann, Linh T. Bach, Christian M. Steuer, Julia J. Reimer, Dietmar Schwarz, Frederik Börnke

TL;DR
This study explores how grafting tomato plants can transfer heat stress tolerance from rootstocks to scions, identifying key genes and physiological changes involved.
Contribution
The study identifies specific genes and physiological responses linked to heat stress tolerance transferability through grafting in tomatoes.
Findings
Genotype T12 showed superior heat stress tolerance compared to T48.
Transcriptomics revealed changes in photosystem components and key transcription factors like ARID, DDT, GNAT, and Jumonji.
Grafting influenced yield and photosystem responses, but not always as expected based on genotype classification.
Abstract
Heat stress (HS) poses a significant threat for tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) cultivation, leading to reduced yield throughout the production cycle. In addition to breeding, a promising approach to enhance HS tolerance is through grafting. For this, rootstocks obtained from tolerant genotypes are joint with susceptible scions that possess superior fruit traits. This study aims to test whether a priori knowledge of tolerance levels can be used to facilitate the identification of suitable grafting combinations, while simultaneously exploring molecular and physiological changes caused by grafting that further our understanding of the transferability of HS tolerance by grafting. The HS tolerance of tomato plants was evaluated using information about biomass development and flowering traits obtained for a diversity panel of 56 tomato genotypes comprising Mediterranean landraces cultivated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant Disease Management Techniques · Plant Virus Research Studies · Plant pathogens and resistance mechanisms
