Trans-generational adaptation to maternal climate through hormone transport in plants
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Whether organisms can inherit parental adaptations to the environment is a major question in evolutionary biology. Plant development is highly plastic and dependent on the seasonal cues which are used to control growth and reproduction. Seed dormancy and germination are key traits which respond strongly to temperature during seed development and here we show that progeny adaptation to seasonal climate is inherited from the mother plant. Loss of maternal LIKE HETEROCHROMATIN PROTEIN 1 (LHP1) causes an inability of progeny seeds to sense temperature and this is linked mechanistically to reduced ABA levels in seeds and activation of the primary nitrate response. At the single cell level, small changes in temperature activate nitrate signalling specifically in the mother, and ABA biosensor imaging reveals temperature-dependent fluxes of ABA into seeds necessary for dormancy induction. Thus, we reveal that progeny seeds inherit the climate adaptation of mother plants via active hormone transport during seed set.