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OPINION article

Front. Plant Sci., 26 April 2024
Sec. Plant Systems and Synthetic Biology
This article is part of the Research Topic Environmental Stress Memory in Plants View all articles

Environmental signals driving liquid-liquid phase separation – a molecular memory in plants?

Ali Eljebbawi&#x;&#x;Ali Eljebbawi1†‡Stephanie Hutin&#x;Stephanie Hutin2†Chloe ZubietaChloe Zubieta2Yvonne Stahl*&#x;Yvonne Stahl1*‡
  • 1Institute for Developmental Genetics, Heinrich-Heine University, Düsseldorf, Germany
  • 2Laboratoire de Physiologie Cellulaire et Végétale, Université Grenoble Alpes, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Commissariat à l’énergie Atomique et aux Énergies Alternatives, Institut National de Recherche pour l’agriculture, l’alimentation et l’environnement, Institut de Recherche Interdisciplinaire de Grenoble, Grenoble, France

Introduction

Plants face ever changing environmental conditions, where abiotic stresses such as temperature fluctuations, nutrient deficit, and hydric stress can impede their development, yield, and reproduction (van Wallendael et al., 2019; Lamers et al., 2020). Therefore, plants have evolved efficient adaptive mechanisms which boost their competence against recurring stresses. For example, exposure to extreme heat or cold can trigger adaptation through a priming process, leading to the formation of a “stress memory”, which consequently enhances the plant tolerance to these stresses during future encounters (Liu et al., 2022). In contrast, while low temperatures can act as a stress factor, they may also serve as a key developmental cue, particularly in the transition from vegetative to reproductive growth through vernalization. Unlike cold priming, vernalization exploits the memory of the prolonged winter cold to optimally time and induce flowering under warmer conditions (Sharma et al., 2022). These are examples of “long-term” memory, which are sustained by epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation and histone modifications (Zhao et al., 2019; Liu and He, 2020). Remarkably, it can extend across generations via epigenetic inheritance, the activity of small RNAs, and chromatin remodeling (Molinier et al., 2006; Zhang and Tian, 2022). In addition, environmental memory can be “short-term”, temporarily persisting over one or more somatic mitotic divisions, and encompassing rapid and reversible changes in gene expression and hormonal signaling (Li et al., 2019; do Amaral et al., 2020). Similarly to long-term memory, this may be due to epigenetic mechanisms. However, recent studies suggest additional mechanisms for short-term memory, including protein phase separation.

Protein-driven LLPS is under active study as a mechanism for environmental sensing, response, and molecular memory in different organisms, including animals and yeast. During LLPS, proteins transition from a homogenous solution to distinct condensates (Musacchio, 2022), creating specialized environments for cellular processes (Chen et al., 2020; Maruri-López et al., 2021). For instance, LLPS is implicated in animal neuronal function, information processing, and memory storage in neuronal cells (Chen et al., 2020). Furthermore, P-bodies and stress granules, which regulate RNA metabolism and respond to cellular stress, are formed through LLPS, concentrating specific molecules for functions like mRNA degradation and translation repression, and are conserved across diverse eukaryotic organisms, including animal and yeast cells (Luo et al., 2018; Kearly et al., 2024). Also, the serotonin-induced aggregation of cytoplasmic polyadenylation element-binding proteins (CPEB) plays a role in long-term potentiation during courtship in Drosophila (Lau et al., 2020). In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, phase separation of WHI3, an RNA-binding protein, is involved in encoding memory of deceptive courtship (Lau et al., 2020). LLPS is also involved in chromatin organization and transcriptional regulation (Wang and Liu, 2019). To illustrate, condensates can bring together or isolate transcription factors (TFs) and coactivators or corepressors, creating and sustaining specific patterns of gene expression, which potentially influences cellular memory processes (Wang and Liu, 2019). While linking LLPS and memory remains an area of research and debate, exploring the roles of condensates in cellular organization, signaling, and gene regulation might offer valuable insights into cellular information storage. Although the putative role of LLPS in molecular memory has been primarily studied in yeast and animals, emerging evidence points to its role in plant stress and environmental memory.

Several pioneering studies demonstrate the significance of proteins undergoing LLPS in plant environmental response. In Arabidopsis thaliana, pivotal examples include the phase-separating proteins FRIGIDA (FRI), VERNALIZATION 1 (VRN1), and FLOWERING CONTROL LOCUS A (FCA), which collectively regulate FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC) during vernalization, highlighting the role of LLPS in establishing a memory of past winter conditions to control flowering time (Levy et al., 2002; Fang et al., 2019; Zhou et al., 2019). Additionally, the thermosensory protein, EARLY FLOWERING 3 (ELF3), undergoes reversible phase separation with hysteresis behavior, potentially establishing a short-term memory of temperature (Jung et al., 2020; Murcia et al., 2022). In response to hyperosmotic stress, the transcriptional regulator SEUSS (SEU) undergoes condensation, where the formed condensates exhibit partial persistence, indicating the formation of a potential stress memory (Wang et al., 2022a). Moreover, FLOE1, a condensate-forming water sensor during seed germination, can form physiologically-relevant hydrogels, which may retain hydric stress memory (Dorone et al., 2021). This opinion aims to discuss the fundamental characteristics of LLPS in environmental sensing and explores the potential role of condensate formation as a molecular stress or environmental memory in plants.

Main text

Protein-mediated LLPS: a mechanism for changing cellular dynamics

Protein-mediated LLPS is highly dependent on protein concentration, ionic strength, pH, temperature, and the presence of different “clients” or “cargos”, such as other protein partners and/or nucleic acids (Elbaum-Garfinkle et al., 2015; Nott et al., 2015; Saha et al., 2016; Dignon et al., 2020). Proteins that drive LLPS are often characterized by intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs), which lack well-defined secondary and tertiary structure (Burke et al., 2015; Elbaum-Garfinkle et al., 2015; Kroschwald et al., 2018; Dignon et al., 2019). IDRs have a high degree of conformational flexibility and often exhibit multivalency, which is closely associated with the collective interactions between polypeptide chains (Pak et al., 2016). Accordingly, IDRs can drive phase separation via cation-pi, pi-pi, electrostatic attraction, and hydrophobic interactions (Tsang et al., 2020). It is worth noting that IDR-harboring proteins do not necessarily form condensates (Alberti et al., 2019). A subset of IDRs, called prion-like proteins or prion-like domains (PrD), are more frequently associated with phase separation, and are often enriched in asparagine and glutamine residues and bear sequence similar to yeast prion proteins. In addition to disordered proteins, LLPS can be initiated by folded domains such as coiled-coils (Ramšak et al., 2023)and via the formation of protein-RNA complexes mediated by RNA-recognition motifs (RRM) (Dignon et al., 2020; Ramšak et al., 2023).

Protein-mediated LLPS is commonly studied by diverse fluorescence-based techniques including Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching (FRAP) and Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS). FRAP is a method for determining the dynamics of fluorescently labelled proteins in a condensate. The fluorophore can be partially or fully photobleached and its fluorescence recovery curve examined. This analysis provides valuable insights into condensate dynamics, including the mobility and exchange of molecules within the condensates or between the condensate and the environment. Alternatively, FCS can analyze molecular dynamics in both in vitro and in vivo condensate phases, determining molecular concentration, oligomeric state, diffusion coefficient (hydrodynamic radius), and molecular interactions (Wang et al., 2022b). These techniques, while applicable in various research areas, are particularly instrumental in elucidating the behavior of biomolecular condensates, thus advancing our understanding of LLPS. Of note, based on FRAP and FCS experiments, many proteins, which initially form highly mobile liquid condensates, may become more visco-elastic and rigid as they “age” over time, forming gel-like states and fibrils (Molliex et al., 2015; Murakami et al., 2015; Patel et al., 2015; Wegmann et al., 2018; Ray et al., 2020). In animals, these fibrils have been linked to neurological diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease (Lin et al., 2015; Xiang et al., 2015; Pak et al., 2016). However, the physiological role of hydrogel/fibril formation in plants remains to be uncovered. However, the formation of gel and fibril states raises the intriguing question of whether or not this persistent state may act to establish a form of memory.

Stable silencing of FLOWERING LOCUS C during vernalization

Environmental cues such as the prolonged exposure to low temperatures significantly influence the timing of flowering. The expression levels of the flowering repressor FLC time the onset of flowering in biennials and winter annual plants. The prolonged exposure to winter cold is required to repress FLC expression, allowing the plant to flower in the following spring. Vernalization, acting as an epigenetic memory of winter cold, determines the expression levels of FLC, synchronizing flowering to favorable spring conditions. High levels of FLC expression are maintained by the transcription factor FRI, resulting in suppression of flowering. Under low temperatures, the cold stabilization of FRI and its increased interaction with multiple factors drive the formation of FRI nuclear condensates, which requires its C-terminal IDR (Zhu et al., 2021). These nuclear condensates reduce FRI binding to the FLC locus via a sequestration mechanism, which consequently decreases FLC expression. Notably, FRI condensation is slowly reversible, dissipating within 5 hours upon returning to warmer conditions, suggesting that LLPS may act as a short-term memory of cold conditions (Zhu et al., 2021). Furthermore, noncoding RNAs may play a role in FRI LLPS, although there is some contradiction in the literature regarding their role in FRI condensation. Some evidence suggests that FRI condensation is promoted by cold-induced antisense RNA COOLAIR derived from the FLC locus (Zhu et al., 2021), while other studies indicate that condensation of FRI is independent of COOLAIR (Zhang et al., 2023).

The RNA-binding protein FLOWERING CONTROL LOCUS A (FCA), containing two PrDs, and the coiled-coil protein, FLL2, promote nuclear body formation with COOLAIR and antagonize the activity of FRI, resulting in reduced FLC transcription (Fang et al., 2019) (Figure 1A). In addition, VERNALIZATION 1 (VRN1), a two B3 domain DNA-binding protein that binds non-specifically to DNA, undergoes LLPS and is required for the stable repression of FLC (Levy et al., 2002). VRN1 condensates form on the FLC locus, inducing structural changes in the FLC chromatin and ensuring FLC silencing (Zhou et al., 2019) (Figure 1A). In summary, several LLPS events elicit the stable repression of FLC, contributing to the molecular memory of winter cold. Notably, FRI condensation, which is cold-dependent and slowly dissipating upon a shift to warmer conditions, suggests that LLPS may act as a direct mechanism for cold memory.

Figure 1
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Figure 1 LLPS regulates important molecular processes in response to different stresses. (A) The molecular regulation of FLC repression during vernalization through LLPS. (B) SEUS LLPS in response to increasing extracellular osmolarity. (C) FLOE1 LLPS upon hydration governed by prion-like glutamine, proline, and serine rich (QPS).domain and the aspartic acid and serine rich (DS) domain, modulating its biological function. (D) ELF3 undergoes LLPS in response to temperature.

ELF3: a multivalent environmental sensor forming a short-term environmental memory

The transcriptional regulator ELF3 represents another example of LLPS in plant environmental response and possibly temperature memory establishment. ELF3 integrates information from the circadian clock, temperature, and light perception pathways to act as a key component in photoperiodic flowering (Ezer et al., 2017; Jung et al., 2020; Silva et al., 2020). It has no structured domains of known function and acts as a scaffold binding many TFs (Hicks et al., 2001; Nusinow et al., 2011; Herrero et al., 2012; Ezer et al., 2017; Silva et al., 2020). Upon exposure to higher ambient temperature, ELF3 undergoes reversible LLPS driven by its C-terminal PrD and fine-tuned by the length of polyglutamine regions in this domain (7 to 29 glutamines across 181 natural A. thaliana accessions) (Jung et al., 2020; Hutin et al., 2023). In vitro and in vivo FRAP experiments on ELF3 condensates demonstrate an aging process in which a low mobility hydrogel forms. In addition, in vitro temperature ramp experiments for ELF3 PrD reveal a delay in phase separation reversibility upon the return to lower temperatures, indicating a degree of hysteresis in the protein behavior (Hutin et al., 2023). This suggests that the system may maintain a memory of its past states. Indeed, in planta ELF3 forms nuclear condensates in response to increasing temperatures (Figure 1D). Their reversibility via cooling requires a more pronounced temperature shift or longer time compared to the warm temperature-induced LLPS. Consequently, as ELF3 remains in the inactive phase separated state, the regulation of its target genes is delayed, thereby potentially establishing a short-term memory of temperature (Murcia et al., 2022).

SEUSS and FLOE1: response to osmotic stress and water availability

In response to hyperosmotic stress, the transcriptional regulator SEU forms condensates due to conformational changes within its N-terminal IDR. SEU condensation, which likely occurs via LLPS, is triggered by intracellular molecular crowding. It is vital for the stress response and the subsequent expression of osmotic stress-responsive genes (Wang et al., 2022a) (Figure 1B). Although SEU forms reversable condensates, FRAP analysis revealed their incomplete recovery, suggesting that they exhibit partial persistence with lower mobility or reduced turnover. This incomplete recovery hints at the possibility that SEU forms a gel-like state, indicating a potential mechanism for retaining a stress memory.

Additionally, FLOE1 is an PrD-containing protein that suppresses seed germination under unfavorable conditions (Dorone et al., 2021). It undergoes LLPS upon hydration, allowing the embryo to sense water (Figure 1C). Interestingly, its biological function is modulated by the biophysical state of its condensates, which is governed by the glutamine, proline, and serine rich (QPS) domain and the aspartic acid and serine rich (DS) domain. While the QPS domain is responsible for driving FLOE1 condensation and its function in water-sensing, the DS domain regulates the fluidity of its condensates. Natural variation in the DS domain across ecotypes promotes local adaptation by fine-tuning the fluidity of FLOE1 condensates (Dorone et al., 2021). Notably, FLOE1 condensates appear spontaneously and exhibit full reversibility through repeated hydration-dehydration cycles. However, deleting the DS domain leads to the formation of an irreversible hydrogel and promotes germination under stress, indicating that changes in the dynamics of FLOE1 condensates affect the stress response (Dorone et al., 2021).

Concluding remarks

Exploring protein-mediated LLPS in plant cells highlights its intriguing roles in cellular dynamics, stress perception, and potentially, environmental or stress memory. In other organisms, memory effects of protein phase separation are better established. For example, in yeast, prion proteins provide a nongenetic method of inheritance and may provide an adaptive advantage in different environments and under different stress conditions (Chakrabortee et al., 2016). The self-replicating structures of prion proteins separate genotype from phenotype, enabling genetically identical cells within a population to adopt new traits (Byers and Jarosz, 2014). In mammalian systems, the neuronal protein, CaMKII, involved in synaptic plasticity, undergoes phase separation triggered by Ca2+ and this state persists even after the Ca2+ is removed, maintaining a memory of the calcium signal (Hosokawa et al., 2021). The sensitivity of condensate formation to various physical factors suggests that abiotic stresses may be detected by LLPS in plants (Burkart et al., 2022). Although confirming the role of these condensates in establishing environmental memory in plants is in its nascency, there is intriguing preliminary evidence pointing to the involvement of phase separation in this process. Potential mechanisms of LLPS mediated short-term memory might include changes in protein dynamics, hysteresis of condensate reversibility and irreversible gel formation. The ability of condensates to adopt different states (liquid, gel and/or fibril) raise intriguing questions about the persistence and functional implications of these condensates in plant environmental memory. Further investigations into the structural, biomechanical, and biochemical basis of protein phase separation in plant physiology will expand our understanding of this dynamic cellular process and whether this is a mechanism plants use to establish a physiological “memory” of past environmental events.

Author contributions

AE: Conceptualization, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing. SH: Visualization, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing. CZ: Writing – review & editing. YS: Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Project administration, Writing – review & editing.

Funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The position of AE is funded by the German Research Foundation through grant STA1212 6-1 to YS. The position of SH is funded by from the ANR (ANR-19-CE20-0021 and ANR-21-CE11-0037).

Acknowledgments

We apologize to all colleagues whose relevant work could not be mentioned due to space restrictions.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

The author(s) declared that they were an editorial board member of Frontiers, at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision.

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Keywords: liquid-liquid phase separation, condensates, abiotic stress, plant memory, environmental sensing

Citation: Eljebbawi A, Hutin S, Zubieta C and Stahl Y (2024) Environmental signals driving liquid-liquid phase separation – a molecular memory in plants? Front. Plant Sci. 15:1391043. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1391043

Received: 24 February 2024; Accepted: 17 April 2024;
Published: 26 April 2024.

Edited by:

Ze-Ting Song, Yunnan University, China

Reviewed by:

Enrique Castano, Centro de Investigación Científica de Yucatán, Mexico

Copyright © 2024 Eljebbawi, Hutin, Zubieta and Stahl. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Yvonne Stahl, y.stahl@bio.uni-frankfurt.de

These authors have contributed equally to this work and share first authorship

Present address: Ali Eljebbawi, Institute of Molecular Biosciences, Goethe-University, Frankfurt, Germany
Yvonne Stahl, Institute of Molecular Biosciences, Goethe-University, Frankfurt, Germany

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