Abstract

BackgroundCB-1 and K326 are closely related tobacco cultivars; however, their cold tolerance capacities are different. K326 is much more cold tolerant than CB-1.ResultsWe studied the transcriptomes and metabolomes of CB-1 and K326 leaf samples treated with cold stress. Totally, we have identified 14,590 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in CB-1 and 14,605 DEGs in K326; there was also 200 differentially expressed metabolites in CB-1 and 194 in K326. Moreover, there were many overlapping genes (around 50%) that were cold-responsive in both plant cultivars, although there were also many differences in the cold responsive genes between the two cultivars. Importantly, for most of the overlapping cold responsive genes, the extent of the changes in expression were typically much more pronounced in K326 than in CB-1, which may help explain the superior cold tolerance of K326. Similar results were found in the metabolome analysis, particularly with the analysis of primary metabolites, including amino acids, organic acids, and sugars. The large number of specific responsive genes and metabolites highlight the complex regulatory mechanisms associated with cold stress in tobacco. In addition, our work implies that the energy metabolism and hormones may function distinctly between CB-1 and K326.ConclusionsDifferences in gene expression and metabolite levels following cold stress treatment seem likely to have contributed to the observed difference in the cold tolerance phenotype of these two tobacco cultivars.

Highlights

  • CB-1 and K326 are closely related tobacco cultivars; their cold tolerance capacities are different

  • The phenotype of CB-1 and K326 was checked after one day of cold treatment

  • The unigenes were annotated by performing BLASTX searching against the UniProt database [43]

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Summary

Introduction

CB-1 and K326 are closely related tobacco cultivars; their cold tolerance capacities are different. Low temperature is one of the key environmental stresses that many plants have to cope with during their life cycle [1,2,3]. It can influence growth and development, as well as the yield, quality, and geographic distribution of crop plants. Plants from temperate regions have the ability to cold acclimate, that is, to develop increased freezing tolerance after being exposed to low, nonfreezing temperatures [4]. Many important crops, such as rice, maize, soybean, cotton, tomato, and tobacco, which originated in the tropics or subtopics, lack a cold acclimation mechanism and are sensitive to cold stress [5].

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