3,688 research outputs found
Transcription factors and plants response to drought stress: Current understanding and future directions
Increasing vulnerability of plants to a variety of stresses such as drought, salt and extreme temperatures poses a global threat to sustained growth and productivity of major crops. Of these stresses, drought represents a considerable threat to plant growth and development. In view of this, developing staple food cultivars with improved drought tolerance emerges as the most sustainable solution toward improving crop productivity in a scenario of climate change. In parallel, unraveling the genetic architecture and the targeted identification of molecular networks using modern “OMICS” analyses, that can underpin drought tolerance mechanisms, is urgently required. Importantly, integrated studies intending to elucidate complex mechanisms can bridge the gap existing in our current knowledge about drought stress tolerance in plants. It is now well established that drought tolerance is regulated by several genes, including transcription factors (TFs) that enable plants to withstand unfavorable conditions, and these remain potential genomic candidates for their wide application in crop breeding. These TFs represent the key molecular switches orchestrating the regulation of plant developmental processes in response to a variety of stresses. The current review aims to offer a deeper understanding of TFs engaged in regulating plant’s response under drought stress and to devise potential strategies to improve plant tolerance against drought
Unique and conserved MicroRNAs in wheat chromosome 5D revealed by next-generation sequencing
MicroRNAs are a class of short, non-coding, single-stranded RNAs that act as post-transcriptional regulators in gene expression. miRNA analysis of Triticum aestivum chromosome 5D was performed on 454 GS FLX Titanium sequences of flow sorted chromosome 5D with a total of 3,208,630 good quality reads representing 1.34x and 1.61x coverage of the short (5DS) and long (5DL) arms of the chromosome respectively. In silico and structural analyses revealed a total of 55 miRNAs; 48 and 42 miRNAs were found to be present on 5DL and 5DS respectively, of which 35 were common to both chromosome arms, while 13 miRNAs were specific to 5DL and 7 miRNAs were specific to 5DS. In total, 14 of the predicted miRNAs were identified in wheat for the first time. Representation (the copy number of each miRNA) was also found to be higher in 5DL (1,949) compared to 5DS (1,191). Targets were predicted for each miRNA, while expression analysis gave evidence of expression for 6 out of 55 miRNAs. Occurrences of the same miRNAs were also found in Brachypodium distachyon and Oryza sativa genome sequences to identify syntenic miRNA coding sequences. Based on this analysis, two other miRNAs: miR1133 and miR167 were detected in B. distachyon syntenic region of wheat 5DS. Five of the predicted miRNA coding regions (miR6220, miR5070, miR169, miR5085, miR2118) were experimentally verified to be located to the 5D chromosome and three of them : miR2118, miR169 and miR5085, were shown to be 5D specific. Furthermore miR2118 was shown to be
expressed in Chinese Spring adult leaves. miRNA genes identified in this study will expand our understanding of gene regulation in bread wheat
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Plastid to Nucleus Signalling and the Evolution of C4 Photosynthesis
Plastid to nucleus signals have been shown to regulate core photosynthetic genes, in both C3 and C4 species. However, the regulatory mechanisms of this signalling are not well understood. C4 photosynthesis has evolved from the ancestral C3 state in over sixty lineages of plants. Although commonly described as the most remarkable example of convergent evolution known to biology, more recent analysis indicates that the C4 pathway is also underpinned by parallel evolution. For example, orthologous genes from separate C4 lineages have repeatedly been recruited into the C4 pathway such that they are co-regulated with existing genes of C3 photosynthesis. For decades, the mechanisms allowing co-regulation of C4 and C3 photosynthesis genes have been unclear, but it was recently shown that in C3 Arabidopsis thaliana C4 orthologues can be controlled by plastid-to-nucleus signalling (Burgess et al. 2016). This strongly implies that evolution has re-enforced existing regulatory networks that operate in the C3 state to control expression of C4 genes. Currently, the extent to which this phenomenon is true in additional C3 lineages is not known. The work presented here aimed to understand in more detail which genes are under plastid control in a eudicotyledon and monocotyledon model and identify the factors involved.
To investigate this, Arabidopsis thaliana and Oryza sativa were subjected to inhibitors of chloroplast development and differential gene expression analysis performed by mRNA sequencing. Comparisons between illuminated and dark-grown plants for each treatment enabled the complementary roles of plastid-to-nucleus signalling and light regulation to be identified. Over 20,000 genes were detected for each sample, with over 1000 genes differentially expressed in lincomycin-treated plants compared to controls, and over 3500 genes differentially expressed when plants were treated with norflurazon. Furthermore, over half of the C4 orthologues in these two C3 species were regulated by both light and the chloroplast. Genes whose transcript abundance was significantly affected by chloroplast inhibition were scanned for known motif binding sites. A number of putative transcription factors were identified that bind to motifs found in both A. thaliana and rice chloroplast responsive genes. An additional method for identifying potential cis-regulatory elements involved in plastid to nucleus signalling is ATAC-seq. A trial has allowed this method, including the analysis pipeline, to be optimised such that in the future it could be employed to create an atlas of transcription factor binding sites involved in plastid to nucleus signalling
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Identification and Characterization of the PEBP Family Genes in Moso Bamboo (Phyllostachys heterocycla).
Moso bamboo is one of the economically most important plants in China. Moso bamboo is a monocarpic perennial that exhibits poor and slow germination. Thus, the flowering often causes destruction of moso bamboo forestry. However, how control of flowering and seed germination are regulated in moso bamboo is largely unclear. In this study, we identified 5 members (PhFT1-5) of the phosphatidyl ethanolamine-binding proteins (PEBP) family from moso bamboo genome that regulate flowering, flower architecture and germination, and characterized the function of these PEBP family genes further in Arabidopsis. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that 3 (PhFT1, PhFT2 and PhFT3), 1 (PhFT4) and 1 (PhFT5) members belong to the TFL1-like clade, FT-like clade, and MFT-like clade, respectively. These PEBP family genes possess all structure necessary for PEBP gene function. The ectopic overexpression of PhFT4 and PhFT5 promotes flowering time in Arabidopsis, and that of PhFT1, PhFT2 and PhFT3 suppresses it. In addition, the overexpression of PhFT5 promotes seed germination rate. Interestingly, the overexpression of PhFT1 suppressed seed germination rate in Arabidopsis. The expression of PhFT1 and PhFT5 is significantly higher in seed than in tissues including leaf and shoot apical meristem, implying their function in seed germination. Taken together, our results suggested that the PEBP family genes play important roles as regulators of flowering and seed germination in moso bamboo and thereby are necessary for the sustainability of moso bamboo forest
Extensive evolution of cereal ribosome-inactivating proteins translates into unique structural features, activation mechanisms, and physiological roles
Ribosome-inactivating proteins (RIPs) are a class of cytotoxic enzymes that can depurinate rRNAs thereby inhibiting protein translation. Although these proteins have also been detected in bacteria, fungi, and even some insects, they are especially prevalent in the plant kingdom. This review focuses on the RIPs from cereals. Studies on the taxonomical distribution and evolution of plant RIPs suggest that cereal RIPs have evolved at an enhanced rate giving rise to a large and heterogeneous RIP gene family. Furthermore, several cereal RIP genes are characterized by a unique domain architecture and the lack of a signal peptide. This advanced evolution of cereal RIPs translates into distinct structures, activation mechanisms, and physiological roles. Several cereal RIPs are characterized by activation mechanisms that include the proteolytic removal of internal peptides from the N-glycosidase domain, a feature not documented for non-cereal RIPs. Besides their role in defense against pathogenic fungi or herbivorous insects, cereal RIPs are also involved in endogenous functions such as adaptation to abiotic stress, storage, induction of senescence, and reprogramming of the translational machinery. The unique properties of cereal RIPs are discussed in this review paper
Cross-Species Network Analysis Uncovers Conserved Nitrogen-Regulated Network Modules in Rice
In this study, we used a cross-species network approach to uncover nitrogen-regulated network modules conserved across a model and a crop species. By translating gene “network knowledge” from the data-rich model Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) to a crop (Oryza sativa), we identified evolutionarily conserved N-regulatory modules as targets for translational studies to improve N-use efficiency in transgenic plants. To uncover such conserved N-regulatory network modules, we first generated a N-regulatory network based solely on rice (O. sativa) transcriptome and gene interaction data. Next, we enhanced the “network knowledge” in the rice N-regulatory network using transcriptome and gene interaction data from Arabidopsis and new data from Arabidopsis and rice plants exposed to the same N-treatment conditions. This cross-species network analysis uncovered a set of N-regulated transcription factors (TFs) predicted to target the same genes and network modules in both species. Supernode analysis of the TFs and their targets in these conserved network modules uncovered genes directly related to nitrogen use (e.g. N-assimilation) and to other shared biological processes indirectly related to nitrogen. This cross-species network approach was validated with members of two TF families in the supernode network, bZIP-TGA and HRS1/HHO family, have recently been experimentally validated to mediate the N-response in Arabidopsis.Fil: Obertello, Mariana. University of New York; Estados Unidos. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Instituto de Investigaciones en IngenierĂa GenĂ©tica y BiologĂa Molecular ; ArgentinaFil: Shrivastava, Stuti. University of New York; Estados UnidosFil: Katari, Manpreet S.. University of New York; Estados UnidosFil: Coruzzi, Gloria M.. University of New York; Estados Unido
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