Abstract

In field conditions, plants are often exposed to a combination of abiotic and biotic stresses, for instance, drought and pathogen infection. Transcriptome studies on Arabidopsis thaliana and other plants under individual and combined drought and pathogen stresses have unveiled the activation of shared molecular defense mechanisms. These shared plant responses are characterized by commonly regulated genes under both individual as well as combined stresses. Therefore, the identification of commonly regulated genes during individual and combined stress conditions can reveal plant responses towards combined stress. Available transcriptome studies on combined-stressed plants have hinted at G-Box Binding Factor 3 (GBF3) as one of the regulatory components of the shared response. However, the mechanistic understanding of the role of AtGBF3 under combined drought and pathogen stress is not yet decoded. In the current study, we used genetic approaches to identify the role of AtGBF3 in conferring tolerance to individual and combined drought and pathogen stress. Atgbf3 mutant plants showed increased susceptibility, while AtGBF3-overexpressing plants were tolerant under individual and combined drought and Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato infection stresses as compared to wild-type plants. We further analyzed the global transcriptome of Atgbf3 mutant plants under combined stress to identify its downstream targets. We also established a high-throughput method to apply combined polyethylene glycol and pathogen stress on Murashige and Skoog medium-grown plants to further validate the role of AtGBF3 in combined stress.

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