Abstract

The cuticle, composed primarily of wax and cutin, covers most plant aerial surfaces and plays a vital role in interactions between plants and their environment. Some ATP-binding cassette G subfamily (ABCG) members are involved in cuticular lipid molecule exportation to outside in the plant surface. Thellungiella salsugineum, a relative of Arabidopsis thaliana with a heavy cuticle, has extreme stress tolerance. TsABCG11, an ABCG transporter was cloned (GenBank accession number JQ389853), and its structure was studied. qRT-PCR showed that TsABCG11 expression varied in different organs of T. salsugineum and was upregulated under ABA, NaCl, drought and cold conditions. The rosette leaves from 4-week-old TsABCG11 overexpressed (OE) Arabidopsis plants displayed lower rates of water loss and decreased chlorophyll-extracted rates compared to wild-type plants. TsABCG11-OE plants also exhibited significantly increased total cuticular wax and cutin monomer amounts, mainly due to prominent changes in the C29, C31, and C33 alkanes in the wax and C18:2 dioic in cutin monomers, respectively. TsABCG11-OE seedlings exhibit lower root growth inhibition under 100 mM of NaCl or 1 µM of ABA than the wild type. Four-week-old TsABCG11-OE plants exhibited higher photosynthetic rates and water-use efficiency under cold stress (4 °C) than control plants. These results indicate that TsABCG11 plays an important role in cuticle lipid exportation and is involved in abiotic stresses, probably having a close relationship with extreme stress tolerance in T. salsugineum.

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