Abstract

Soybean plants are sensitive to the effects of abiotic stress and belong to the group of crops that are less drought and salt tolerant. The identification of genes involved in mechanisms targeted to cope with water shortage is an essential and indispensable task for improving the drought and salt tolerance of soybean. One of the approaches for obtaining lines with increased tolerance is genetic modification. The dehydration-responsive element binding proteins (DREBs), belonging to the AP2 family, are trans-active transcription factors that bind to the cis-sequences of the promoter for activating the expression of the target genes that mediate drought and salt tolerant responses. In this study, the GmDREB6 transgene was introduced into DT84 cultivar soybean plants, using Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. The efficacy of GmDREB6 overexpression in enhancing the transcriptional level of GmP5CS and proline accumulation in genetically modified (GM) soybean plants was also assayed. The results demonstrated that ten GM soybean plants (T0 generation) were successfully generated from the transformed explants after selecting with kanamycin. Among these plantlets, the presence of the GmDREB6 transgene was confirmed in nine plants by Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), and eight plants showed positive results in Southern blot. In the T1 generation, four GM lines, labelled T1-2, T1-4, T1-7, and T1-10, expressed the recombinant GmDREB6 protein. In the T2 generation, the transcriptional levels of the GmP5CS gene were higher in the GM lines than in the non-transgenic plants, under normal conditions and also under conditions of salt stress and drought, ranging from 1.36 to 2.01 folds and 1.58 to 3.16 folds that of the non-transgenic plants, respectively. The proline content was higher in the four GM soybean lines, T2-2, T2-4, T2-7, and T2-10 than in the non-transgenic plants, ranging from 0.82 μmol/g to 4.03 μmol/g. The proline content was the highest in the GM T2-7 line (7.77 μmol/g). In GM soybean lines, T2-2, T2-4, T2-7, and T2-10 proline content increased after plants were subjected to salt stress for seven days, in comparison to that under normal conditions, and ranged from 247.83% to 300%, while that of the non-GM plants was 238.22%. These results suggested that GmDREB6 could act as a potential candidate for genetic engineering for improving tolerance to salt stresses.

Highlights

  • Soybean plants are sensitive to the effects of abiotic stress and belong to the group of crops that are less drought and salt tolerant

  • The presence of the GmDREB6 transgene in the transformed soybean plants was confirmed by Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)

  • Southern blotting was performed for verifying the incorporation of the GmDREB6 transgene into the genome of these 9 GmDREB6-positive soybean plants (Fig. 2B)

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Summary

Introduction

Soybean plants are sensitive to the effects of abiotic stress and belong to the group of crops that are less drought and salt tolerant. In GM soybean lines, T2-2, T2-4, T2-7, and T2-10 proline content increased after plants were subjected to salt stress for seven days, in comparison to that under normal conditions, and ranged from 247.83% to 300%, while that of the non-GM plants was 238.22% These results suggested that GmDREB6 could act as a potential candidate for genetic engineering for improving tolerance to salt stresses. Genetic engineering is a powerful tool for the development of drought and salt tolerant crops, since it allows the modification of gene expression in response to drought and salt stresses In this context, the identification of genes that are involved in the mechanisms targeted to cope with water shortage and high salinity are essential for the development of GM drought and salt tolerant soybean plants. Our study aimed to analyse the expression of the GmDREB6 transgene and the efficacy of GmDREB6 overexpression in enhancing the transcription levels of the GmP5CS gene and proline accumulation in GM soybean plants under high salinity conditions

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