Helping Potatoes Deal with Heat

Published online: May 15, 2019 Articles University of Erlangen-Nürnberg
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Source: EurekAlert!

If there's one thing potato plants don't like, it's too much heat. If the temperature is too high, potato plants form significantly lower numbers of tubers or sometimes none at all. Biochemists at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU) in Germany have now discovered the reason why: If the temperature rises, a so-called small RNA blocks the formation of tubers. The scientists have now successfully switched off this small RNA and have produced potato plants that are more resistant to high temperatures, which is an important contribution to securing crop yields in the future in view of climate change. They have presented their results in the journal Current Biology published by Cell Press.

Along with corn, rice, wheat and cassava, potatoes are one of the most important staple foods worldwide. The highest yields can be gained at moderate temperatures, which means around 70 degrees Fahrenheit during the day and 64 degrees at night. At these temperatures and at the correct day length, a protein that induces the formation of tubers called SELF-PRUNING 6A (SP6A) is formed. This triggers tuber formation in the plant to prepare it for colder periods. However, if the temperature is very warm, as is the case in the laboratory led by Uwe Sonnewald's team at FAU, who set the temperature to 84 degrees during the day and 81 degrees at night, the plants switch to a kind of growth program where they form more green shoots and leaves and hardly any or no tubers. In addition, the few tubers that are formed contain less starch and germinate more quickly, which means they are not as nutritious and rot more quickly.

"Up to now, the mechanism that prevents tuberisation at high temperatures was not known," says Sonnewald, who is the chair of biochemistry at FAU. With his team of researchers, Sonnewald has now discovered a small RNA that comprises around 19 nucleotides and that regulates tuber formation depending on temperature. The RNA is inactive at low temperatures. If temperatures rise, it blocks the formation of SP6A and thus the formation of tubers.

In the second phase, the scientists created potato plants in which the effect of the small RNA was deactivated and exposed the plants to high temperatures in the greenhouse. The result was that these plants continued to produce good quality tubers even at temperatures of over 84 degrees during the day or 81 degrees at night.

"Our results offer us the means of still being able to grow potatoes in future at increasing temperatures" says Sonnewald.

The next step for the researchers is testing the potato plants under field conditions to see whether they can withstand high temperatures in realistic conditions.