Abstract

Plants are exposed to a wide range of abiotic stresses (AS), which often occur in combination. Because physiological investigations typically focus on one stress, our understanding of unspecific stress responses remains limited. The plant redox homeostasis, i.e., the production and removal of reactive oxygen species (ROS), may be involved in many environmental stress conditions. Therefore, this study intended to identify genes, which are activated in diverse AS, focusing on ROS-related pathways. We conducted a meta-analysis (MA) of microarray experiments, focusing on rice. Transcriptome data were mined from public databases and fellow researchers, which represented 36 different experiments and investigated diverse AS, including ozone stress, drought, heat, cold, salinity, and mineral deficiencies/toxicities. To overcome the inherent artifacts of different MA methods, data were processed using Fisher, rOP, REM, and product of rank (GeneSelector), and genes identified by most approaches were considered as shared differentially expressed genes (DEGs). Two MA strategies were adopted: first, datasets were separated into shoot, root, and seedling experiments, and these tissues were analyzed separately to identify shared DEGs. Second, shoot and seedling experiments were classed into oxidative stress (OS), i.e., ozone and hydrogen peroxide treatments directly producing ROS in plant tissue, and other AS, in which ROS production is indirect. In all tissues and stress conditions, genes a priori considered as ROS-related were overrepresented among the DEGs, as they represented 4% of all expressed genes but 7–10% of the DEGs. The combined MA approach was substantially more conservative than individual MA methods and identified 1001 shared DEGs in shoots, 837 shared DEGs in root, and 1172 shared DEGs in seedlings. Within the OS and AS groups, 990 and 1727 shared DEGs were identified, respectively. In total, 311 genes were shared between OS and AS, including many regulatory genes. Combined co-expression analysis identified among those a cluster of 42 genes, many involved in the photosynthetic apparatus and responsive to drought, iron deficiency, arsenic toxicity, and ozone. Our data demonstrate the importance of redox homeostasis in plant stress responses and the power of MA to identify candidate genes underlying unspecific signaling pathways.

Highlights

  • IntroductionFlood, salinity, extremes of temperature, nutrient deficiency, UV radiation, pollutants, herbicides, and pathogens are some of the factors a plant needs to cope with to survive and grow, usually with more than one at time

  • While most animals can move and escape from harmful conditions, plants cannot

  • The Percentage of reactive oxygen species (ROS) Related differentially expressed genes (DEGs) is Constant in the Response to Different Stresses

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Summary

Introduction

Flood, salinity, extremes of temperature, nutrient deficiency, UV radiation, pollutants, herbicides, and pathogens are some of the factors a plant needs to cope with to survive and grow, usually with more than one at time. These factors limit crop yields and quality (Gill and Tuteja, 2010; Miller et al, 2010; Wang and Frei, 2011). Understanding, how a plant responds to such stresses and the mechanisms underlying stress tolerance can give us a better view of how to improve the global food production.

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