Abstract

During several developmental processes, expansins contribute to cell enlargement by promoting cell wall loosening. To explore the biological roles of expansins during drought stress response and to characterize different expansins in tea, we performed a detailed analysis of the expansin gene family covering phylogeny, gene structure, profiling of gene expression and co-expression network analysis. We identified a total of 40 expansin genes in the tea genome belonging to 3 subfamilies, out of which 29 tea expansins belong to EXPA, 9 to EXLA and 2 to EXPB subfamilies. A minimum of 3 and a maximum of 13 exons are present in the gene structure of expansins. Presence of drought stress responsive cis-acting elements in the upstream of promoter regions of 40% of the identified expansins shows that the putative expansins may have been involved in tea plant’s response to drought stress. At least 15 out of the 40 expansin genes are found to be differentially expressed in response to drought in each of the drought stress related public datasets analysed in-silico. TEA022767 belonging to EXPA subfamily is seen to be upregulated during drought stress, as revealed from the analysis of all three publicly available bio-projects. Co-expression network analysis shows that TEA022767 and TEA032954 form a connecting link between two expression correlation groups that further signifies their role in drought stress response in tea. This study helps to interpret and to understand the biological roles of diverse expansin genes in tea plants under drought stress conditions.

Highlights

  • Expansins are cell wall-loosening proteins lacking hydrolytic activity

  • We identified a total of 40 expansin genes in the tea genome belonging to 3 subfamilies, out of which 29 tea expansins belong to expansin A (EXPA), 9 to expansin-like A (EXLA) and 2 to expansin B (EXPB) subfamilies

  • In order to identify expansin genes in the tea genome, a combination of BLAST searches using the corresponding sequences from Arabidopsis thaliana and Oryza sativa as queries and the HMMER 3.0 program was used to predict expansins from tea genome

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Summary

Introduction

Expansins are cell wall-loosening proteins lacking hydrolytic activity These proteins regulate and uphold the shape by loosening/disrupting H-bonds of cellulose microfibrils in the extracellular matrix in a non-enzymatic pH dependent manner. This leads to remodelling and loosening of cell wall and cell extension [1, 2]. A large superfamily of expansin in plants encompassing four subfamilies has been discovered by genome-wide investigation [20]. They are defined as expansin A (EXPA), expansin B (EXPB), expansin-like A (EXLA) and expansin-like B (EXLB). Double psi beta-barrel or DPBB is the domain homologous to glycoside hydrolase

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