(Press-News.org) LA JOLLA (August 29, 2025)—A plant’s number one priority is to grow—a feat that demands sunlight, nutrients, and water. If just one of these three inputs is missing, like water in a drought, growth halts. You might then think that at the end of that drought, the plant would jump right back into growing. Instead, its priorities shift.
Salk plant biologists used advanced single-cell and spatial transcriptomic techniques to look closely at how a small, flowering plant called Arabidopsis thaliana recovers after drought. They discovered that immunity became the plant’s number one priority during this post-drought period, as they watched immune-boosting genes light up rapidly throughout the Arabidopsis leaves. This supercharged immune response, dubbed “Drought Recovery-Induced Immunity” (DRII), also occurred in wild and domesticated tomatoes, suggesting that prioritizing immunity is conserved evolutionarily and likely takes place in other important crops.
The findings, published in Nature Communications on August 29, 2025, plant the seed for growing more resilient crops and protecting the global food supply in years to come.
“Drought poses a major challenge for plants, but what is less understood is how they recover once water returns,” says senior author Joseph Ecker, professor, Salk International Council Chair in Genetics, and Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. “We found that, rather than accelerating growth to compensate for lost time, Arabidopsis rapidly activates a coordinated immune response. This discovery highlights recovery as a critical window of genetic reprogramming and points to new strategies for engineering crops that can rebound more effectively after environmental stress.”
Thirsty plant, dry soil
Arabidopsis has served as an important laboratory model for plant biologists for half a century. The plant is quick and easy to grow, and it has a relatively simple genome compared to other plants. But crucially, many of the individual genes within the Arabidopsis genome are shared across many plant species—including agriculturally relevant crops like tomatoes, wheat, and rice.
One feature Arabidopsis shares with every plant is its need for water. The little plant sucks up water through microscopic pores on its “skin”—but these little pores can also put the plant at risk, as they directly expose its vulnerable insides to the outside world. This challenges the plant to find a balance between taking in water and defending itself against harmful environmental intruders like pathogens.
This balance becomes even more challenging during drought recovery. Without water, the plant closes its pores and enters a stressed state, arresting its growth and rationing its stores. When water returns, the pores quickly reopen to quench the thirsty plant, exposing it suddenly once more to the hazards of the outside world. So, how do plants protect themselves from this sudden onslaught in the drought recovery process?
“We know a lot about what’s happening in plants during drought, yet we know next to nothing about what happens during that critical recovery period,” says first author Natanella Illouz-Eliaz, a postdoctoral researcher in Ecker’s lab. “This recovery period is incredibly genetically active and complex, as we’ve already discovered processes we had no idea—or even assumed—would be a part of recovery. Now we know definitively that recovery is worth studying more moving forward.”
A speedy, single-cell, spatially aware study
The researchers took Arabidopsis plants that had been living in a drought state and reintroduced the parched plants to water. They surveyed the plants’ leaves for changes in gene expression starting at 15 minutes and incrementally worked all the way up to 260 minutes. This speedy surveillance sets the study apart, as plant biologists often don’t capture data so soon after rehydration.
“What’s really incredible here,” adds Illouz-Eliaz, “is we would have entirely missed this discovery had we not decided to capture data at these early time points.”
While all the cells in an Arabidopsis leaf share the same genetic code, the expression of each gene in that code varies from cell to cell. The pattern of genes expressed by each unique cell determines that cell’s identity and function. Effectively capturing gene expression patterns that differ between microscopic cells means recruiting sophisticated gene-sequencing technology like single-cell and spatial transcriptomics.
Older methods required scientists to take a leaf, grind it up, and measure general expression patterns from there. Single-cell transcriptomics allows scientists to capture gene expression within a cellular context, which in turn more accurately represents cellular dynamics within plant tissues. In addition to this impressive single-cell precision, spatial transcriptomics analyzes those single cells within the physical context of the intact plant. With this method, scientists can process the leaf (or a section of that leaf) as a whole to see how expression differs between neighboring cells throughout drought or recovery.
Drought Recovery-Induced Immunity (DRII)
Just 15 minutes after rewatering, the team watched dormant genes sprout to life. Expression patterns shifted significantly across the many leaf cells, turning on gene after gene until thousands of new genes were active. These many genes kick-started an immune response that the researchers call “Drought Recovery-Induced Immunity” (DRII). In the vulnerable rehydration period, DRII came to Arabidopsis’ defense, protecting the plant against pathogens.
After witnessing DRII in Arabidopsis, the team was curious whether wild and farmed tomato plants experience DRII, too. Both tomato types did experience DRII, which, like in Arabidopsis, increased their pathogen resistance. These tomato findings also suggest the immune response may be shared across many other plant and crop species.
There’s more left to understand about this rapid immune response. For starters, the rehydration process starts in the roots, so how does the signal travel so quickly from the roots to the leaf, enacting gene expression changes in only 15 minutes? And what is that signal?
The researchers also believe the findings can help shift the field’s perspective on plant stress. Perhaps plants aren’t just focusing on survival and growth, but rather on preparing for what comes next after water returns. And maybe weighing survival versus longevity depends on a system that senses stress severity.
“Our results reveal that drought recovery is not a passive process but a highly dynamic reprogramming of the plant’s immune system,” says Ecker. “By defining the early genetic events that occur within minutes of rehydration, we can begin to uncover the molecular signals that coordinate stress recovery and explore how these mechanisms might be harnessed to improve crop resilience.”
Other authors include Jingting Yu, Joseph Swift, Kathryn Lande, Bruce Jow, Lia Partida-Garcia, Travis Lee, Rosa Gomez Castanon, William Owens, Chynna Bowman, Emma Osgood, Joseph Nery, and Tatsuya Nobori of Salk; and Za Khai Tuang, Adi Yaaran, Yotam Zait, and Saul Burdman of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
The work was supported by the United States–Israel Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund (FI-601-2020), George E. Hewitt Foundation for Medical Research, Weizmann Institute of Science, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, National Institutes of Health (K99GM154136, NCI CSSG P30 CA014195, NIA P30 AG068635), Henry L. Guenther Foundation, and Waitt Foundation.
About the Salk Institute for Biological Studies:
Unlocking the secrets of life itself is the driving force behind the Salk Institute. Our team of world-class, award-winning scientists pushes the boundaries of knowledge in areas such as neuroscience, cancer research, aging, immunobiology, plant biology, computational biology, and more. Founded by Jonas Salk, developer of the first safe and effective polio vaccine, the Institute is an independent, nonprofit research organization and architectural landmark: small by choice, intimate by nature, and fearless in the face of any challenge. Learn more at www.salk.edu.
END
All DRII-ed up: How do plants recover after drought?
Salk Institute researchers find plants rapidly boost their immune systems during drought recovery, pinpointing potential genetic strategies for designing more drought-resistant crops
2025-08-29
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Research on stigma says to just ‘shake it off’
2025-08-29
The stereotypical employee may be at a desk in front of a computer screen working a nine-to-five, but for many employees, the work day is filled with manual labor, hazardous environments and late-night shifts. Your local garbage collector, for example, is someone with a job that society might consider “dirty,” both literally and socially.
Scott Dust, PhD, professor in the management department at the University of Cincinnati Carl H. Lindner College of Business, worked with doctoral candidates Sodiq Babatunde and Ben Fagan to analyze the impact of stress and ...
Scientists track lightning “pollution” in real time using NASA satellite
2025-08-29
Picture this: You’re stuck in traffic on a summer afternoon, checking the weather app on your phone as dark storm clouds roll in. You might think about power outages or possible flooding, but you probably don’t think about how every lightning bolt that flashes across the sky also emits a gas, nitrogen oxide (NO), that is also emitted in the exhaust from your car’s engine.
Yet, that’s exactly what occurs during a thunderstorm. For the first time, scientists from the University of Maryland were able to detect lightning and its impact on air quality using high-frequency ...
Millions of women rely on contraceptives, but new Rice study shows they may do more than just prevent pregnancy
2025-08-29
Hormonal birth control is a fact of life for millions of women. In the U.S. alone, more than 60 million women of reproductive age have used contraceptives according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, most often to prevent pregnancy but also to manage conditions such as endometriosis, polycystic ovary syndrome and irregular cycles.
And as many women will attest, these drugs can affect more than the body. Mood changes, weight fluctuations and emotional ups and downs are common stories women ...
Hot days make for icy weather, Philippine study finds
2025-08-29
The Philippines, like other tropical countries, is known more for its balmy climate than for hailstorms. But a new Philippine study—the first of its kind—has found that the country’s hottest days are, in fact, more likely to produce hail.
Hailstorms are so few and far between in the Philippines that, even in an age of pervasive social media updates, they are still met with amazement and astonishment.
“Most people are surprised when hail happens because it is relatively rare in the Philippines,” ...
Roxana Mehran, MD, receives the most prestigious award given by the European Society of Cardiology
2025-08-29
The European Society of Cardiology (ESC) has selected Roxana Mehran, MD, Director of Interventional Cardiovascular Research and Clinical Trials at the Zena and Michael A. Wiener Cardiovascular Institute at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, as a winner of the organization’s top honor. Dr. Mehran was presented with the “ESC Gold Medal” during a special ceremony at the ESC Congress in Madrid on Friday, August 29.
The ESC Gold Medal recognizes exceptional scientists for their contributions to cardiovascular ...
World's first clinical trial showing lubiprostone aids kidney function
2025-08-29
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a major health issue worldwide. Many patients end up requiring regular dialysis to avoid kidney failure and stay alive. Despite the severity of the condition, there are currently no drugs available that improve kidney function. A research group led by Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine’s Professor Takaaki Abe has found a remarkable solution to treat patients with CKD by co-opting a drug typically used for constipation. This is the first time that this drug (lubiprostone) was shown to prevent the decline of renal function in patients with ...
Capturing language change through the genes
2025-08-29
Throughout human history, there have been many instances where two populations came into contact – especially in the past few thousand years because of large-scale migrations as a consequence of conquests, colonialization, and, more recently, globalization. During these encounters, not only did populations exchange genetic material, but also cultural elements.
When populations interact, they may borrow technologies, beliefs, practices, and also, crucially, aspects of language. With this, sounds, words or grammatical patterns can be exchanged ...
Public trust in elections increases with clear facts
2025-08-29
With control of Congress and a check on the Trump administration at issue in the 2026 midterm elections, the upcoming election cycle may again see claims of voter fraud.
But warning voters beforehand that there may be false claims about the election, and providing them with information on election security measures through "prebunking," can increase confidence in the results and decrease beliefs in voter fraud, according to a new study published in Science Advances.
"Prebunking is effective because it provides people with novel facts about how elections are ...
Thawing permafrost raised carbon dioxide levels after the last ice age
2025-08-29
Carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere vary naturally between ice ages and interglacial periods. A new study by researchers at the University of Gothenburg shows that an unexpectedly large proportion of carbon dioxide emissions after the ice age may have come from thawing permafrost.
For a long time, it was the shifts between ice ages and interglacial periods that determined how much carbon dioxide was in the atmosphere. During ice ages, CO2 levels fell, only to rise by around 100 ppm (parts per million) during interglacial ...
New DNA test reveals plants’ hidden climate role
2025-08-29
Few of us ever think about what happens beneath our feet when we walk through a field of wheat or clover. We see the stalks, leaves, and flowers, but in practice we have no direct access to the roots.
Roots, however, are central. They anchor plants in the soil, supply them with water and nutrients, and contribute to carbon storage in the ground.
But because roots are hidden, researchers have for decades struggled to measure how much biomass lies below and how it is distributed among species.
“We have always known that roots are important, but we have lacked a precise tool to measure them. It’s a bit like studying marine ecosystems without ever being able to dive ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
High Mountain Asia’s shrinking glaciers linked to monsoon changes
All DRII-ed up: How do plants recover after drought?
Research on stigma says to just ‘shake it off’
Scientists track lightning “pollution” in real time using NASA satellite
Millions of women rely on contraceptives, but new Rice study shows they may do more than just prevent pregnancy
Hot days make for icy weather, Philippine study finds
Roxana Mehran, MD, receives the most prestigious award given by the European Society of Cardiology
World's first clinical trial showing lubiprostone aids kidney function
Capturing language change through the genes
Public trust in elections increases with clear facts
Thawing permafrost raised carbon dioxide levels after the last ice age
New DNA test reveals plants’ hidden climate role
Retinitis pigmentosa mouse models reflect pathobiology of human RP59
Cell’s ‘antenna’ could be key to curing diseases
Tiny ocean partnership between algae and bacteria reveals secrets of evolution
Scientists uncover cellular “toolkit” to reprogram immune cells for cancer therapy
Blocking protein control pathway slows rhabdomyosarcoma growth in mice
2026 Hertz Fellowship Application Now Open
The gut immune system is altered in mouse model of Alzheimer’s, providing a new target for therapeutics
ADHD drugs are being prescribed too quickly to preschoolers
UCLA scientists develop off-the-shelf immunotherapy for metastatic kidney cancer
Extreme heat linked to spike in domestic violence calls in New Orleans, study finds
Mount Sinai-Duke University study identifies DNA variants that increase testosterone production in PCOS patients
Physiology-guided complete revascularization in older patients with myocardial infarction
Metals and sulfate in air pollution mixture may contribute most to asthma hospitalizations
Understanding the profound yet hidden effects of neglect on white matter structures
SEOULTECH researchers develop revolutionary 3D-printed smart materials create high-performance pressure sensors for wearables
Pusan National University scientists develop self-deploying material for next-gen robotics
Remote screening for asymptomatic atrial fibrillation
Inflammation may explain why women with no standard modifiable risk factors have heart attacks and strokes
[Press-News.org] All DRII-ed up: How do plants recover after drought?Salk Institute researchers find plants rapidly boost their immune systems during drought recovery, pinpointing potential genetic strategies for designing more drought-resistant crops