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Amazing: How plants memorize things uncovered

For the first time ever, researchers have revealed that plants too can memorize things. It is due to some inbuilt memory mechanism that enables plants to do seasonal things repeatedly. Special proteins called prions that play the role of neurons to form environmental memories are discovered after three years of research and analysis of over 20,000 plants.

Research on prions started back in 1980s when several diseases including Mad Cow disease were linked to some self-propagating proteins that were also involved in brain disorders. Several studies have explained that prions have the capability to store information for a long duration of time.

The current study has taken a step further and explains the role of prions in plants. Study authors believe that prions play a crucial role in flowering of plants. The study appeared in the US journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Brain cells store information by rearranging molecules in a special configuration. Similarly, prions can also change their shape and induce shape change to arrange protein molecules in a specific configuration to memorize things.

“This is the first evidence that a plant protein may self-replicate as a prion – this opens

up the possibility of protein-based memories in plants,” said Sohini Chakrabortee, who led the research as a post-doctoral fellow in the laboratory of Susan Lindquist at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the US. “It is these memories that allow plants to distinguish between a single night of cold and a long winter.”

“When we talk about plant memories, we mean the plant that has a memory responds differently to a stimulus compared to a plant that has never experienced this before,” said Can Kayatekin, a post-doctoral associate and a member of the Whitehead-MIT team.

 

Peace-lover, creative, smart and intelligent. Prapti is a foodie, music buff and a travelholic. After leaving a top-notch full time corporate job, she now works as an Online Editor for Biotecnika. Keen on making a mark in the scientific publishing industry, she strives to find a work-life balance. Follow her for more updates!