Abstract

BackgroundThe plant tolerance mechanisms to low temperature have been studied extensively in the model plant Arabidopsis at the transcriptional level. However, few studies were carried out in plants with strong inherited cold tolerance. Chorispora bungeana is a subnival alpine plant possessing strong cold tolerance mechanisms. To get a deeper insight into its cold tolerance mechanisms, the transcriptome profiles of chilling-treated C. bungeana seedlings were analyzed by Illumina deep-sequencing and compared with Arabidopsis.ResultsTwo cDNA libraries constructed from mRNAs of control and chilling-treated seedlings were sequenced by Illumina technology. A total of 54,870 unigenes were obtained by de novo assembly, and 3,484 chilling up-regulated and 4,571 down-regulated unigenes were identified. The expressions of 18 out of top 20 up-regulated unigenes were confirmed by qPCR analysis. Functional network analysis of the up-regulated genes revealed some common biological processes, including cold responses, and molecular functions in C. bungeana and Arabidopsis responding to chilling. Karrikins were found as new plant growth regulators involved in chilling responses of C. bungeana and Arabidopsis. However, genes involved in cold acclimation were enriched in chilling up-regulated genes in Arabidopsis but not in C. bungeana. In addition, although transcription activations were stimulated in both C. bungeana and Arabidopsis, no CBF putative ortholog was up-regulated in C. bungeana while CBF2 and CBF3 were chilling up-regulated in Arabidopsis. On the other hand, up-regulated genes related to protein phosphorylation and auto-ubiquitination processes were over-represented in C. bungeana but not in Arabidopsis.ConclusionsWe conducted the first deep-sequencing transcriptome profiling and chilling stress regulatory network analysis of C. bungeana, a subnival alpine plant with inherited cold tolerance. Comparative transcriptome analysis suggests that cold acclimation is not a major chilling tolerance mechanism of C. bungeana. Activation of protein phosphorylation and ubiquitination may confer chilling tolerance to C. bungeana in a more rapid and flexible way than cold acclimation. Such differences may have contributed to the differences in cold tolerance between C. bungeana and Arabidopsis. The results presented in this paper will be informative for gene discovery and the molecular mechanisms related to plant cold tolerance.

Highlights

  • The plant tolerance mechanisms to low temperature have been studied extensively in the model plant Arabidopsis at the transcriptional level

  • Sequencing and de novo assembly of C. bungeana transcriptome Two cDNA libraries were generated with mRNA from control (22°C) or 24 hours chilling-treated (2°C) plants of C. bungeana and sequenced by Illumina deep-sequencing. 41,499,576 and 40,009,694 clean reads of 90 bp were generated from control and chilling-treated cDNA libraries, respectively (Table 1)

  • None of the CRT binding transcription factor (CBF) (CBF1/DREB1b, CBF2/DREB1c and CBF3/ DREF1a) was on the list of overlapped Transcription factor (TF) genes though CBF2 and CBF3 were chilling up-regulated in Arabidopsis as was shown by both ATH-SR and ATH-AR data protein autoubiquitination protein phosphorylation jasmonic acid biosynthetic process iii regulation of transcription, DNA-dependent i signal transduction defense response by callose deposition in cell wall defense response to bacterium defense response to fungus innate immune response cellular response to abiotic stimulus organic substance transport response to UV-B

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The plant tolerance mechanisms to low temperature have been studied extensively in the model plant Arabidopsis at the transcriptional level. Few studies were carried out in plants with strong inherited cold tolerance. Chorispora bungeana is a subnival alpine plant possessing strong cold tolerance mechanisms. To get a deeper insight into its cold tolerance mechanisms, the transcriptome profiles of chilling-treated C. bungeana seedlings were analyzed by Illumina deep-sequencing and compared with Arabidopsis. & C.A. Mey (C. bungeana) is a perennial subnival alpine plant that can survive freezing temperature [1]. Our previous studies performed at physiological and molecular levels showed that this plant has strong cold (chilling and freezing) tolerance [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Little is known about its tolerance mechanisms, if any, distinguishing C. bungeana from other tropical or temperate plants

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

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

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.