Sentinel plants as programmable processing units: insights from a multidisciplinary perspective about stress memory and plant signaling and their relevance at community level

Plant Signal Behav. 2018;13(10):e1526001. doi: 10.1080/15592324.2018.1526001. Epub 2018 Sep 27.

Abstract

Stress memory and an effective signaling among individuals in a given community are recognized to improve plant performance under recurrent stressful conditions. As living beings with memory and signaling abilities, plants can be considered as processing units and then be trained - or programmable from a computational viewpoint - and prepared for facing biotic and abiotic stresses. Here, we propose that sentinel plants could improve the resilience of agricultural and natural communities by reducing the impact of biotic or abiotic stressors on their neighbors. Modeling plants as programmable (or trainable) processing units compels us to think about a multidisciplinary perspective for integrating stress memory, signaling, and resilience of biological systems into executable programs, fostering the creation of applications and technologies that would benefit from the spatiotemporal dynamics related to plant-plant and plant-environment interactions.

Keywords: Communication; computational thinking; memory; network; plant community; programming; resilience; signaling.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Gene Expression Regulation, Plant
  • Plants / metabolism*
  • Sentinel Species / metabolism*
  • Signal Transduction
  • Stress, Physiological / physiology

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the Coordination for Improvement of Higher Level Personnel [88881.145912/2017-01]; the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP, Brazil) [Grant numbers 2015/24494-8 and 2017/12302-2].