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1.
Pigeonpea (Cajanus cajan L.) cold and drought regulatory protein encoding gene (CcCDR) has been introduced into yeast and tobacco for its functional validation. In yeast, expression of CcCDR imparted marked tolerance against abiotic stresses exerted by PEG and NaCl. Transgenic tobacco lines, expressing CcCDR under the control of CaMV35S and rd29A promoters, when subjected to mannitol, NaCl and cold (4 °C) stress, developed into healthy plants with profuse root system, increased biomass, root length and chlorophyll content in contrast to the weak-stunted wild-type plants. Transgenic plants also showed increased levels of proline, reducing sugars and endogenous abscisic acid (ABA) content. Exogenous ABA treatment resulted in increased hypersensitivity and decreased stomatal aperture size of transgenic plants compared to wild type. Localization studies confirmed that CcCDR could enter the nucleus as revealed by intense fluorescence, indicating its plausible interaction with various nuclear proteins. The overall results amply demonstrate the intrinsic effect of CcCDR in bestowing multiple abiotic stress tolerance at cellular and whole plant levels. Accordingly, the multipotent CcCDR seems promising as a prime candidate gene to fortify crop plants with abiotic stress tolerance.  相似文献   

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Low temperature stress adversely affects plant growth, development, and crop productivity. Analysis of the function of genes in the response of plants to low temperature stress is essential for understanding the mechanism of chilling and freezing tolerance. In this study, PsCor413im1, a novel cold-regulated gene isolated from Phlox subulata, was transferred to Arabidopsis to investigate its function under low temperature stress. Real-time quantitative PCR analysis revealed that PsCor413im1 expression was induced by cold and abscisic acid. Subcellular localization revealed that PsCor413im1-GFP fusion protein was localized to the periphery of the chloroplast, consistent with the localization of chloroplast inner membrane protein AtCor413im1, indicating that PsCor413im1 is a chloroplast membrane protein. Furthermore, the N-terminal of PsCor413im1 was determined to be necessary for its localization. Compared to the wild-type plants, transgenic plants showed higher germination and survival rates under cold and freezing stress. Moreover, the expression of AtCor15 in transgenic plants was higher than that in the wild-type plants under cold stress. Taken together, our results suggest that the overexpression of PsCor413im1 enhances low temperature tolerance in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

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Induction of Freezing Tolerance in Spinach during Cold Acclimation   总被引:8,自引:2,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) seedlings, grown in soil or on an agar medium in vitro, became cold acclimated when exposed to a constant 5°C. Plants subjected to cold acclimation, beginning 1 week postgermination, attained freezing tolerance levels similar to that achieved by seedlings that were cold acclimated beginning 3 weeks after sowing. Seedlings at 1 week of age had only cotyledonary leaves, while 3-week-old seedlings had developed true leaves. Plants grown in vitro were able to increase in freezing tolerance, but were slightly less hardy than soil-grown plants. These results suggest that spinach, a cool-season crop that begins growth in early spring when subzero temperatures are likely, can undergo cold acclimation at the earliest stages of development following germination. Axenic seedlings, grown in vitro, were used to develop a noninjurious radiolabeling technique. Leaf proteins were radiolabeled to specific activities of 105 counts per minute per microgram at 25°C or 5 × 104 counts per minute per microgram at 5°C over a 24 hour period. The ability to radiolabel leaf proteins of in vitro grown plants to high specific activities at low temperature, without injury or microbial contamination, will facilitate studies of cold acclimation.  相似文献   

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Background

Calcium-binding proteins that contain EF-hand motifs have been reported to play important roles in transduction of signals associated with biotic and abiotic stresses. To functionally characterize gens of EF-hand family in response to abiotic stress, an MtCaMP1 gene belonging to EF-hand family from legume model plant Medicago truncatula was isolated and its function in response to drought and salt stress was investigated by expressing MtCaMP1 in Arabidopsis.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Transgenic Arabidopsis seedlings expressing MtCaMP1exhibited higher survival rate than wild-type seedlings under drought and salt stress, suggesting that expression of MtCaMP1 confers tolerance of Arabidopsis to drought and salt stress. The transgenic plants accumulated greater amounts of Pro due to up-regulation of P5CS1 and down-regulation of ProDH than wild-type plants under drought stress. There was a less accumulation of Na+ in the transgenic plants than in WT plants due to reduced up-regulation of AtHKT1 and enhanced regulation of AtNHX1 in the transgenic plants compared to WT plants under salt stress. There was a reduced accumulation of H2O2 and malondialdehyde in the transgenic plants than in WT plants under both drought and salt stress.

Conclusions/Significance

The expression of MtCaMP1 in Arabidopsis enhanced tolerance of the transgenic plants to drought and salt stress by effective osmo-regulation due to greater accumulation of Pro and by minimizing toxic Na+ accumulation, respectively. The enhanced accumulation of Pro and reduced accumulation of Na+ under drought and salt stress would protect plants from water default and Na+ toxicity, and alleviate the associated oxidative stress. These findings demonstrate that MtCaMP1 encodes a stress-responsive EF-hand protein that plays a regulatory role in response of plants to drought and salt stress.  相似文献   

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The molecular mechanisms of stress tolerance and the use of modern genetics approaches for the improvement of drought stress tolerance have been major focuses of plant molecular biologists. In the present study, we cloned the Gossypium hirsutum sucrose non-fermenting 1-related protein kinase 2 (GhSnRK2) gene and investigated its functions in transgenic Arabidopsis. We further elucidated the function of this gene in transgenic cotton using virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) techniques. We hypothesized that GhSnRK2 participates in the stress signaling pathway and elucidated its role in enhancing stress tolerance in plants via various stress-related pathways and stress-responsive genes. We determined that the subcellular localization of the GhSnRK2-green fluorescent protein (GFP) was localized in the nuclei and cytoplasm. In contrast to wild-type plants, transgenic plants overexpressing GhSnRK2 exhibited increased tolerance to drought, cold, abscisic acid and salt stresses, suggesting that GhSnRK2 acts as a positive regulator in response to cold and drought stresses. Plants overexpressing GhSnRK2 displayed evidence of reduced water loss, turgor regulation, elevated relative water content, biomass, and proline accumulation. qRT-PCR analysis of GhSnRK2 expression suggested that this gene may function in diverse tissues. Under normal and stress conditions, the expression levels of stress-inducible genes, such as AtRD29A, AtRD29B, AtP5CS1, AtABI3, AtCBF1, and AtABI5, were increased in the GhSnRK2-overexpressing plants compared to the wild-type plants. GhSnRK2 gene silencing alleviated drought tolerance in cotton plants, indicating that VIGS technique can certainly be used as an effective means to examine gene function by knocking down the expression of distinctly expressed genes. The results of this study suggested that the GhSnRK2 gene, when incorporated into Arabidopsis, functions in positive responses to drought stress and in low temperature tolerance.  相似文献   

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The outer membrane lipoprotein, Pal, plays a major role maintaining the integrity of outer membrane and cell morphology in Gram-negative bacteria. Here, we represent A novel role of AaPal in tolerance to salt and alkaline stresses. The cell density of Escherichia coli expressing AaPal was approx. three times as that of control strain when grown in the presence of 1 M NaCl or at pH 9.0 for 14 h, and transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana grew taller and stronger than wild-type plants when subjected to 200 mM NaCl or pH 9.0 stress. This tolerance was attributed to higher concentrations of K+ and lower concentrations of Na+ in the transgenic organism. Our study provides a potential use of AaPal in the improvement of salt and alkaline tolerance in bacteria and plants.  相似文献   

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Key message

Our study shows that the expression of AtCBF3 and AtCOR15A improved the chilling tolerance in transgenic eggplant.

Abstract

In an attempt to improve chilling tolerance of eggplant (Solanum melongena L) plants, Arabidopsis C-repeat binding factor 3 (AtCBF3) and cold-regulated 15A (AtCOR15A) genes both driven by an Arabidopsis RESPONSIVE TO DESSICATION 29A promoter (AtRD29A) were transferred into the plants of eggplant cultivar Sanyueqie. Two independent homozygous transgenic lines were tested for their cold tolerance. The leaves of the transgenic plants in both lines withered much slower and slighter than the wild-type plants after exposure to cold stress treatment at 2 ± 1 °C. The gene expression of AtCBF3 and AtCOR15A was significantly increased as well as the proline content and the levels of catalase and peroxidase activities, while the relative electrical conductivity and the malondialdehyde content were remarkably decreased in the transgenic plants compared with the wild type at 4 ± 0.5 °C. The results showed that the expression of the exogenous AtCBF3 and AtCOR15A could promote the cold adaptation process to protect eggplant plants from chilling stress.  相似文献   

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Although the functional roles of zinc finger-containing glycine-rich RNA-binding proteins (RZs) have been characterized in several plant species, including Arabidopsis thaliana and rice (Oryza sativa), the physiological functions of RZs in wheat (Triticum aestivum) remain largely unknown. Here, the functional roles of the three wheat RZ family members, named TaRZ1, TaRZ2, and TaRZ3, were investigated using transgenic Arabidopsis plants under various abiotic stress conditions. Expression of TaRZs was markedly regulated by salt, dehydration, or cold stress. The TaRZ1 and TaRZ3 proteins were localized to the nucleus, whereas the TaRZ2 protein was localized to the nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum, and cytoplasm. Germination of all three TaRZ-expressing transgenic Arabidopsis seeds was retarded compared with that of wild-type seeds under salt stress conditions, whereas germination of TaRZ2- or TaRZ3-expressing transgenic Arabidopsis seeds was retarded under dehydration stress conditions. Seedling growth of TaRZ1-expressing transgenic plants was severely inhibited under cold or salt stress conditions, and seedling growth of TaRZ2-expressing plants was inhibited under salt stress conditions. By contrast, expression of TaRZ3 did not affect seedling growth of transgenic plants under any of the stress conditions. In addition, expression of TaRZ2 conferred freeze tolerance in Arabidopsis. Taken together, these results suggest that different TaRZ family members play various roles in seed germination, seedling growth, and freeze tolerance in plants under abiotic stress.  相似文献   

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Guy CL  Haskell D 《Plant physiology》1987,84(3):872-878
Spinach (Spinacia oleracea L. cv Bloomsdale) seedlings cultured in vitro were used to study changes in protein synthesis during cold acclimation. Seedlings grown for 3 weeks postsowing on an inorganic-nutrient-agar medium were able to increase their freezing tolerance when grown at 5°C. During cold acclimation at 5°C and deacclimation at 25°C, the kinetics of freezing tolerance induction and loss were similar to that of soil-grown plants. Freezing tolerance increased after 1 day of cold acclimation and reached a maximum within 7 days. Upon deacclimation at 25°C, freezing tolerance declined within 1 day and was largely lost by the 7th day. Leaf proteins of intact plants grown at 5 and 25°C were in vivo radiolabeled, without wounding or injury, to high specific activities with [35S]methionine. Leaf proteins were radiolabeled at 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, and 14 days of cold acclimation and at 1, 3, and 7 days of deacclimation. Up to 500 labeled proteins were separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and visualized by fluorography. A rapid and stable change in the protein synthesis pattern was observed when seedlings were transferred to the low temperature environment. Cold-acclimated leaves contained 22 polypeptides not found in nonacclimated leaves. Exposure to 5°C induced the synthesis of three high molecular weight cold acclimation proteins (CAPs) (Mr of about 160,000, 117,000, and 85,000) and greatly increased the synthesis of a fourth high molecular weight protein (Mr 79,000). These proteins were synthesized during day 1 and throughout the 14 day exposure to 5°C. During deacclimation, the synthesis of CAPs 160, 117, and 85 was greatly reduced by the first day of exposure to 25°C. However, CAP 79 was synthesized throughout the 7 day deacclimation treatment. Thus, the induction at low temperature and termination at warm temperature of the synthesis of CAPs 160, 117, and 85 was highly correlated with the induction and loss of freezing tolerance. Cold acclimation did not result in a general posttranslational modification of leaf proteins. Most of the observed changes in the two-dimensional gel patterns could be attributed to the de novo synthesis of proteins induced by low temperature. In spinach leaf tissue, heat shock altered the pattern of protein synthesis and induced the synthesis of several heat shock proteins (HSPs). One polypeptide synthesized in cold-acclimated leaves had a molecular weight and net charge (Mr 79,000, pI 4.8) similar to that of a HSP (Mr 83,000, pI 4.8). However, heat shock did not increase the freezing tolerance, and cold acclimation did not increase heat tolerance over that of nonacclimated plants, but heat-shocked leaf tissue was more tolerant to high temperatures than nonacclimated or cold-acclimated leaf tissue. When protein extracts from heat-shocked and cold-acclimated leaves were mixed and separated in the same two-dimensional gel, the CAP and HSP were shown to be two separate polypeptides with slightly different isoelectric points and molecular weights.  相似文献   

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Plant growth and crop production are limited by environmental stress. We used a large population of transgenic Arabidopsis expressing rice full-length cDNAs to isolate the rice genes that improve the tolerance of plants to environmental stress. By sowing T2 seeds of the transgenic lines under conditions of salinity stress, the salt-tolerant line R07047 was isolated. It expressed a rice gene, OsSMCP1, which encodes a small protein with a single C2 domain, a Ca2+-dependent membrane-targeting domain. Retransformation of wild-type Arabidopsis revealed that OsSMCP1 is responsible for conferring the salt tolerance. It is particularly interesting that R07047 and newly constructed OsSMCP1-overexpressing Arabidopsis showed enhanced tolerance not only to high salinity but also to osmotic, dehydrative, and oxidative stresses. Furthermore, R07047 showed improved resistance to Pseudomonas syringae. The OsSMCP1 expression in rice is constitutive. Particle-bombardment-mediated transient expression analysis revealed that OsSMCP1 is targeted to plastids in rice epidermal cells. It induced overexpression of several nuclear encoded genes, including the stress-associated genes, in transgenic Arabidopsis. No marked morphological change or growth retardation was observed in R07047 or retransformants. For molecular breeding to improve the tolerance of crops against environmental stress, OsSMCP1 is a promising candidate.  相似文献   

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Chromatin modification is a key mechanism of gene expression in eukaryotes, and involve interactions among several proteins. Recently, we reported that HOS15, a cullin-based E3 ligase receptor, is involved in chromatin remodeling, and regulates gene expression and cold tolerance in Arabidopsis thaliana. To identify the protein complexes that function in conjunction with HOS15, we performed FLAGtag affinity purification using transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing HOS15-FLAG, and isolated HOS15-interacting proteins. To identify these proteins, matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry (MS) analysis was conducted, and 16 proteins were identified. Database searches revealed that these proteins were histone variants, histone deacetylases, mRNA splicing regulators, a protein kinase, and proteins of unknown function. The ability of these proteins binding to HOS15 was confirmed using yeast two-hybrid, co-immunoprecipitation (Co-IP), and luciferase complementation imaging (LCI) assays. Our data suggest that specific interactions between HOS15 and those proteins involve in chromatin remodeling and RNA processing regulates plant development and abiotic stress in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

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