Disputation: Yupeng Zhang

PhD candidate Yupeng Zhang at the Department of Biosciences will be defending the thesis "Investigation of methylome, transcriptome and phenotypic changes induced by temperature during asexual and sexual reproduction in the woodland strawberry (Fragaria vesca)" for the degree of PhD.

Profile picture of Yupeng Zhang

Yupeng Zhang Photo: private.

The trial lecture is: "The importance of epigenetics in the adaptive evolution of plants and animals".

Time and place: December 14, 2022 10:15 AM, Zoom and Nucleus, Bikuben, The Kristine Bonnevie building.

The events will also be live streamed using Zoom. The host of the session will moderate the technicalities while the chair of the defence will moderate the events.

The events opens for participation just before they start, and closes for new participants approximately 15 minutes after it has begun.

Click here to join the events

Main research findings

Environmental change is a major challenge to plants. Yupeng Zhang investigated the epigenetic memory of elevated temperature in different ecotypes of Woodland strawberry (Fragaria vesca) and the potential machinery that establishes this memory. It was determined how the F. vesca transcriptome and methylome adjust to elevated temperature when plants were exposed to different temperatures only during their reproduction period. The elevated temperature induced changes in flowering time, stolon number, and petiole length in one or more ecotypes, indicating an epigenetic memory in F. vesca. Overall, DNA was hypermethylated following asexual reproduction but hypomethylated following sexual reproduction. The transcriptomes during sexual and asexual reproduction was also analysed. A small number of differentially expressed genes were shared between sexually and asexually reproduced individuals. Most genes related to the epigenetic machinery were upregulated in the asexual progeny propagated at elevated temperature, while these genes were downregulated in the sexual progeny. Up to 20% of the differentially methylated genes showed significant gene expression changes in the asexual experiment, whereas this ratio dropped to less than 1% in the sexual experiment. Taken together, the findings show that an epigenetic memory to elevated temperature can be established in F. vesca following both asexual and sexual reproduction.

Candidate contact information 

Researchgate

Adjudication committee

Professor Karen Tanino, University of Saskatchewan

Professor Simen Rød Sandve, Norwegian University of Life Sciences

Associate Professor Jonas Paulsen, University of Oslo

Chair of defence

Professor Rein Aasland, University of Oslo

Supervisors

Professor Paul Grini, University of Oslo

Dr. Carl Gunnar Fossdal, NIBIO

Dr. Paal Krokene, NIBIO

Published Nov. 30, 2022 9:49 AM - Last modified Dec. 9, 2022 11:56 AM