Abstract

BackgroundDrought is one of the major constraints for plant productivity worldwide. Different mechanisms of drought-tolerance have been reported for several plant species including maize. However, the differences in global gene expression between drought-tolerant and susceptible genotypes and their relationship to physiological adaptations to drought are largely unknown. The study of the differences in global gene expression between tolerant and susceptible genotypes could provide important information to design more efficient breeding programs to produce maize varieties better adapted to water limiting conditions.Methodology/Principal FindingsChanges in physiological responses and gene expression patterns were studied under drought stress and recovery in three Mexican maize landraces which included two drought tolerant (Cajete criollo and Michoacán 21) and one susceptible (85-2) genotypes. Photosynthesis, stomatal conductance, soil and leaf water potentials were monitored throughout the experiment and microarray analysis was carried out on transcripts obtained at 10 and 17 days following application of stress and after recovery irrigation. The two tolerant genotypes show more drastic changes in global gene expression which correlate with different physiological mechanisms of adaptation to drought. Differences in the kinetics and number of up- and down-regulated genes were observed between the tolerant and susceptible maize genotypes, as well as differences between the two tolerant genotypes. Interestingly, the most dramatic differences between the tolerant and susceptible genotypes were observed during recovery irrigation, suggesting that the tolerant genotypes activate mechanisms that allow more efficient recovery after a severe drought.Conclusions/SignificanceA correlation between levels of photosynthesis and transcription under stress was observed and differences in the number, type and expression levels of transcription factor families were also identified under drought and recovery between the three maize landraces. Gene expression analysis suggests that the drought tolerant landraces have a greater capacity to rapidly modulate more genes under drought and recovery in comparison to the susceptible landrace. Modulation of a greater number of differentially expressed genes of different TF gene families is an important characteristic of the tolerant genotypes. Finally, important differences were also noted between the tolerant landraces that underlie different mechanisms of achieving tolerance.

Highlights

  • Abiotic stress is a major limiting factor for plant growth and food production in many regions of the world and its effects will become more severe as desertification claims more of the world’s arable land

  • Physiological effects of drought stress Changes in leaf and soil water potentials during drought stress treatments To ensure that plants were grown under the required drought stress conditions, soil and leaf water potentials were monitored throughout the experiment

  • We found that a larger number of Calvin cycle related genes such as transcripts for Rubisco, phosphoglycerate kinase, GADPH, triosephosphate isomerase (TPI) and FBPase were repressed under stress in both tolerant genotypes, and to a greater extent in Michoacan 21 (M21), suggesting that a general repression of photosynthesis related genes occurs in maize under drought

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Summary

Introduction

Abiotic stress is a major limiting factor for plant growth and food production in many regions of the world and its effects will become more severe as desertification claims more of the world’s arable land. Due to a unique genome structure and continuous human selection for over 7000 years, maize is one of the most plastic plant species in terms of its adaptation to different environmental conditions, capable of growing at high and low altitudes and in tropical, subtropical and temperate climates. This genetic variability has been exploited to produce locally adapted drought tolerant maize cultivars for the dry tropical areas of Indonesia, Kenya, Mexico and Colombia [4]. The study of the differences in global gene expression between tolerant and susceptible genotypes could provide important information to design more efficient breeding programs to produce maize varieties better adapted to water limiting conditions

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