Abstract

Improving wheat drought resistance is of great significance for grain production and food security. Hexokinases (HXKs) play a role in sugar signal transduction and are involved in abiotic stress responses in wheat. To clarify the relationship between HXKs and drought stress in wheat, we used the rice active oxygen induction gene OsHXK1 as a reference sequence and the homologously cloned wheat TaHXK7-1A gene. TaHXK7-1A was localized in the nucleus and cell membrane. Under drought stress, over-expression of TaHXK7-1A increased the contents of O2·- and malondialdehyde (MDA) and significantly up-regulated the respiratory burst oxidative homologue (RBOHs) genes in transgenic Arabidopsis. In addition, the over-expression of TaHXK7-1A inhibited the growth of Arabidopsis seedlings and increased ROS accumulation under 6 % exogenous glucose treatment. Gene silencing of TaHXK7-1 decreased the contents of O2·- and MDA in wheat leaves under drought stress, and the RBOHs was significantly down-regulated, which improved the drought resistance of wheat. The results of yeast one-hybrid, EMSA, and dual-luciferase assays showed that TabHLH148-5A bound to the E-box motif of the TaHXK7-1A promoter and inhibited the expression of TaHXK7-1A. In addition, yeast two-hybrid and luciferase complementation imaging assays showed that TaHXK7-1A interacted with TaGRF3-4A. These results indicate that the glucose sensor TaHXK7-1A was negatively regulated by TabHLH148-5A, interacted with TaGRF3-4A, and negatively regulated wheat drought resistance by regulating RBOHs expression and inducing ROS production, thus providing a theoretical basis for revealing the molecular mechanism of wheat drought resistance.

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