Specialized metabolome from developing Arabidopsis thaliana seeds under warm temperatures
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ABSTRACT: Seed development, which depends on mother plant genetic background and environmental conditions, is a major component determining seed composition. Seed quality is a main agricultural concern, impacting both food and non-food applications, while also playing a central role in biodiversity conservation and environment protection. Climate change, characterized, among other stresses, by the emergence of extremely high temperatures, constitute a critical global threat to agriculture. Specialized metabolites (SMs) play crucial roles in the interactions of plants and seeds with their environments. Several SMs are known to be protective compounds involved in seed stress responses, thus impacting directly or indirectly their quality. In this study, we performed untargeted metabolomic (LC-MS/MS) and transcriptomic (RNA-Seq) analyses of Arabidopsis thaliana seeds harvested at six developmental stages (Globular, Transition, Torpedo, Bent cotyledon, Mature green and Dry seed), and developed under control and warm temperature conditions. Those data provide an original and valuable resource for future studies on the role of SMs and genes involved in seed warm thermic stress responses and for the study of their regulation and functions during seed development.
INSTRUMENT(S): impact II, Ultimate 3000 (Thermo Fischer Scientific - HPLC)
ORGANISM(S): Arabidopsis Thaliana (ncbitaxon:3702)
SUBMITTER: Massimiliano CORSO
PROVIDER: MSV000095846 | MassIVE |
REPOSITORIES: MassIVE
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