Aging and longevity in decades‐old genebanked seeds from U.S. endangered plant species: Assessments using survival and RNA integrity assays
Christina Walters, Katherine D. Heineman, Lisa Hill, Hannah Tetreault, Parker Tyler, Zoe Zingerman, Shaimaa Ibrahim, Joyce Maschinski

TL;DR
This study assesses seed longevity in genebanked seeds from U.S. endangered plants using germination and RNA integrity to detect aging.
Contribution
The study introduces RNA integrity as a potential early predictor of seed aging and longevity in genebanked seeds.
Findings
RNA integrity (RIN) declines before viability loss in stored seeds, suggesting it can predict longevity.
Germination and RIN differences between cohorts indicate aging rates in most species.
Wild species seeds germinate slowly and asynchronously, complicating longevity assessments.
Abstract
Seed longevity is critical for successful genebanking, but it is hard to detect or predict. We examined survival of genebanked seeds from species native to the United States to estimate longevity. We tested whether RNA integrity (RIN) can be used to detect aging and predict mortality. Dry seeds from >100 species were stored for 28 ± 7 yr at −18°C. A recently harvested sample (cohort) from the same population provides a zero‐time reference. Germination and RIN were assessed and differences between cohorts were used to distinguish short‐lived seeds from long‐lived seeds. No differences in germination or RIN were detected between cohorts in about one‐fourth of the species. Viability and/or RIN was lower in the stored cohort than in the recently harvested cohort in most species, and the size of the difference was used to infer aging rates. Differences in germination and RIN were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSeed Germination and Physiology · Molecular Biology Techniques and Applications · Genetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model Organisms
