Introduction Water scarcity and soil salinization are increasingly becoming limiting factors in food production, including olives, a major fruit crop in several parts of the world. Investigating historical olives, which are the last resort for genetic resources, is essential due to their natural resilience to drought and salinity, making them valuable for breeding stress-tolerant cultivars and ensuring sustainable olive production. Methods In this study, four historic olive cultivars (‘Nabali’, ‘Mehras’, ‘Frantoio’, and ‘Manzanillo’) were investigated under both drought and salinity stresses. These cultivars also preserve local biodiversity, support traditional agriculture, and offer economic opportunities through unique, heritage-based olive oils. Drought and salt stress in olives are assessed through physiological [the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence (Fv/Fm), relative water content (RWC)], biochemical (proline content), and molecular (stress-responsive genes) analyses to evaluate stress tolerance. Results Under salinity and drought stress, RWC decreased in all olive cultivars, with drought having the most severe impact. ‘Nabali’ exhibited the highest salinity tolerance, while all cultivars showed similar sensitivity to drought. Proline levels remained stable in ‘Mehras’ but decreased under salinity stress in ‘Frantoio’, ‘Manzanillo’, and ‘Nabali’. Higher proline accumulation under drought suggested better drought tolerance than salinity in these cultivars. Photosynthetic efficiency (Fv/Fm) declined under salinity and drought stress in all cultivars, with drought causing a more significant reduction. ‘Manzanillo’ showed the highest sensitivity to drought, while the other cultivars maintained moderate efficiency under stress. ‘Manzanillo’ and ‘Mehras’ exhibited the highest number of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) under both drought and salinity stress, with ‘Manzanillo’ showing 2,934 DEGs under drought and 664 under salinity stress, while ‘Mehras’ had 2,034 and 2,866 DEGs, respectively. ‘Nabali’ demonstrated the strongest salinity-specific response, with 3,803 DEGs under salinity stress compared to 1,346 under drought. ‘Frantoio’ consistently had the lowest number of DEGs, with 345 under drought and 512 under salinity stress, indicating a more stable transcriptional response. Comparative analyses between drought and salinity conditions revealed significant variations, with ‘Manzanillo’ showing 2,599 unique DEGs under drought relative to salinity stress, while ‘Nabali’ exhibited 2,666 DEGs under salinity stress relative to drought. The major novel upregulated genes under salinity stress were Xyloglucan endotransglucosylase hydrolase (7 fold in ‘Nabali’ and 6.9 fold in ‘Mehras’). The novel drought genes detected in ‘Frantoio’ included Phytosulfokines 3 (4.9 fold), while Allene oxide synthase (6.5 fold) and U-box domain-containing (6.4 fold) were detected in ‘Manzanillo’. Discussion The data revealed both novel and common stress-specific biomarkers under both salinity and drought stress, which can potentially be utilized in olive breeding and genetic improvement programs to mitigate stress.
Transcriptome analysis of historic olives reveals stress-specific biomarkers
Hamad A. Alkhatatbeh,M. Sadder,Nizar Haddad,Ibrahim Al-Amad,Mohammad Brake,Nawal Alsakarneh,A. Alnajjar
Published 2025 in Frontiers in Plant Science
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- Publication year
2025
- Venue
Frontiers in Plant Science
- Publication date
2025-06-05
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
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- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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