Abstract

The calcineurin B-like protein (CBL)–CBL-interacting protein kinase (CIPK) complex has been identified as a primary component in calcium sensors that perceives various stress signals. Turnip (Brassica rapa var. rapa) has been widely cultivated in the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau for a century as a food crop of worldwide economic significance. These CBL–CIPK complexes have been demonstrated to play crucial roles in plant response to various environmental stresses. However, no report is available on the genome-wide characterization of these two gene families in turnip. In the present study, 19 and 51 members of the BrrCBL and BrrCIPK genes, respectively, are first identified in turnip and phylogenetically grouped into three and two distinct clusters, respectively. The expansion of these two gene families is mainly attributable to segmental duplication. Moreover, the differences in expression patterns in quantitative real-time PCR, as well as interaction profiles in the yeast two-hybrid assay, suggest the functional divergence of paralog genes during long-term evolution in turnip. Overexpressing and complement lines in Arabidopsis reveal that BrrCBL9.2 improves, but BrrCBL9.1 does not affect, salt tolerance in Arabidopsis. Thus, the expansion of the BrrCBL and BrrCIPK gene families enables the functional differentiation and evolution of some new gene functions of paralog genes. These paralog genes then play prominent roles in turnip's adaptation to the adverse environment of the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau. Overall, the study results contribute to our understanding of the functions of the CBL–CIPK complex and provide basis for selecting appropriate genes for the in-depth functional studies of BrrCBL–BrrCIPK in turnip.

Highlights

  • Plants are exposed to various adverse stress conditions during their growth and development process

  • We used Arabidopsis 10 calcineurin B-like protein (CBL) and 26 CBL-interacting protein kinase (CIPK) CDS sequences (Zhang et al, 2014) as queries to search against the published genome of turnip

  • We identified 19 CBLs and 51 CIPKs, the names assigned to these genes, and their phylogenies and sequence similarities to corresponding individual AtCBLs and AtCIPKs (Tables 1, 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Plants are exposed to various adverse stress conditions during their growth and development process. To cope with numerous environmental stimuli, plants form a series of complex signal transduction mechanisms to perceive, transduce, and respond to different stresses. These responses can minimize the injury derived from adversity. Calcium is a ubiquitous intracellular secondary messenger in plants This element regulates various plant growth and development processes, as well as abiotic and biotic stress responses (Xiong et al, 2002). Most of the genes contained the conserved MGCXXS/T motif that helped the CBLs to anchor in the membrane (Batistic et al, 2008; Weinl and Kudla, 2009). Arabidopsis CBL1, -4, -5, and -9 localize to the plasma membrane (Batistic et al, 2010)

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