Abstract

WRKY transcription factors play important roles in responses to environmental stress stimuli. Using a genome-wide domain analysis, we identified 287 WRKY genes with 343 WRKY domains in the sequenced genome of Brassica napus, 139 in the A sub-genome and 148 in the C sub-genome. These genes were classified into eight groups based on phylogenetic analysis. In the 343 WRKY domains, a total of 26 members showed divergence in the WRKY domain, and 21 belonged to group I. This finding suggested that WRKY genes in group I are more active and variable compared with genes in other groups. Using genome-wide identification and analysis of the WRKY gene family in Brassica napus, we observed genome duplication, chromosomal/segmental duplications and tandem duplication. All of these duplications contributed to the expansion of the WRKY gene family. The duplicate segments that were detected indicated that genome duplication events occurred in the two diploid progenitors B. rapa and B. olearecea before they combined to form B. napus. Analysis of the public microarray database and EST database for B. napus indicated that 74 WRKY genes were induced or preferentially expressed under stress conditions. According to the public QTL data, we identified 77 WRKY genes in 31 QTL regions related to various stress tolerance. We further evaluated the expression of 26 BnaWRKY genes under multiple stresses by qRT-PCR. Most of the genes were induced by low temperature, salinity and drought stress, indicating that the WRKYs play important roles in B. napus stress responses. Further, three BnaWRKY genes were strongly responsive to the three multiple stresses simultaneously, which suggests that these 3 WRKY may have multi-functional roles in stress tolerance and can potentially be used in breeding new rapeseed cultivars. We also found six tandem repeat pairs exhibiting similar expression profiles under the various stress conditions, and three pairs were mapped in the stress related QTL regions, indicating tandem duplicate WRKYs in the adaptive responses to environmental stimuli during the evolution process. Our results provide a framework for future studies regarding the function of WRKY genes in response to stress in B. napus.

Highlights

  • The WRKY gene family is one of the most extensively studied transcription-factor gene families in plants [1]

  • 287 WRKY transcription factor genes were identified in the sequenced genome of B. napus and it represented approximately 0.315% of the whole genome

  • Within the 343 WRKY domains, a total of 26 members showed divergence from the WRKY domain, and 21 belonged to group I. This finding suggested that the WRKY genes in group I are more active and variable compared with the WRKY genes in other groups from B. napus

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The WRKY gene family is one of the most extensively studied transcription-factor gene families in plants [1]. Plant WRKY proteins are characterized by a highly conserved WRKY domain with a 60 amino acid region [2]. It includes the conserved WRKYGQK sequence followed by one of two types of zinc finger motifs, C2H2 or C2–HC [3]. WRKY proteins can be classified into three groups: group I, group II and group III, based on the number of WRKY domains and the types of zinc finger motifs. Group I WRKY contains two WRKY domains and the C2H2-type zinc finger motif (C–X4–5–C–X22–23–H–X1–H). Group II WRKY only contains a single domain and shares the same motif as group I. Group III WRKY contains a single domain and a C2–HC-type motif (C–X7–C–X23–H–X1–C). Group II is further classified into several subgroups based on their phylogenetic clades [3,4,5]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion

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.