Abstract

Di19 is a small family of transcription factors with two atypical Cys2/His2 (C2H2) zinc-finger like domains, which are involved in the regulation of stress responses, growth and development. To date, their potential roles as transcription factors is yet to be unraveled. In the present study, 15 Di19 members were identified in soybean, which were further named as from GmDi19–1 to GmDi19–15. In silica analysis provided a comprehensive understanding of their chromosomal location, exon number, cis -elements, phylogeny, and conserved motifs. GmDi19s had different tissue-specific expression patterns and most GmDi19s responded to at least one stress or hormone treatment, suggesting they have diversified biological functions during stress signaling. GmDi19–15 , encoding a novel transcription factor that has not been identified and characterized in soybean genome, was specifically expressed in roots and GmDi19–15 fused with GFP was mainly located in the nucleus. In addition, GmDi19–15 showed transactivation activity in yeast cells, hinting its potential role as a bona fide transcription regulator. Ectopic expression of GmDi19–15 in Arabidopsis resulted in compromised drought tolerance. Transcriptomic data revealed that a consortium of mis-regulated genes was involved in the auxin-related pathway. Our results expanded the GmDi19 family with 8 new members identified. Moreover, the potential biological role of GmDi19–15 has been pinpointed using the model plant. The present study proposed GmDi19–15 could be a target for tissue-specific genetic modification as well as for generating high-performance traits under stress. • Eight new members of Di19 family in soybean have been identified. • A novel Di19 member in soybean is specifically expressed in roots. • GmDi19-15 negatively regulates drought tolerance. • GmDi19-15 suppresses the auxin-related pathway.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call