Abstract

BackgroundPurple-fleshed sweetpotato (PFSP) is one of the most important crops in the word which helps to bridge the food gap and contribute to solve the malnutrition problem especially in developing countries. Salt stress is seriously limiting its production and distribution. Due to lacking of reference genome, transcriptome sequencing is offering a rapid approach for crop improvement with promising agronomic traits and stress adaptability.ResultsFive cDNA libraries were prepared from the third true leaf of hexaploid sweetpotato at seedlings stage (Xuzi-8 cultivar) treated with 200 mM NaCl for 0, 1, 6, 12, 48 h. Using second and third generation technology, Illumina sequencing generated 170,344,392 clean high-quality long reads that were assembled into 15,998 unigenes with an average length 2178 base pair and 96.55% of these unigenes were functionally annotated in the NR protein database. A number of 537 unigenes failed to hit any homologs which may be considered as novel genes. The current results indicated that sweetpotato plants behavior during the first hour of salt stress was different than the other three time points. Furthermore, expression profiling analysis identified 4, 479, 281, 508 significantly expressed unigenes in salt stress treated samples at the different time points including 1, 6, 12, 48 h, respectively as compared to control. In addition, there were 4, 1202, 764 and 2195 transcription factors differentially regulated DEGs by salt stress at different time points including 1, 6, 12, 48 h of salt stress. Validation experiment was done using 6 randomly selected unigenes and the results was in agree with the DEG results. Protein kinases include many genes which were found to play a vital role in phosphorylation process and act as a signal transductor/ receptor proteins in membranes. These findings suggest that salt stress tolerance in hexaploid sweetpotato plants may be mainly affected by TFs, PKs, Protein Detox and hormones related genes which contribute to enhance salt tolerance.ConclusionThese transcriptome sequencing data of hexaploid sweetpotato under salt stress conditions can provide a valuable resource for sweetpotato breeding research and focus on novel insights into hexaploid sweetpotato responses to salt stress. In addition, it offers new candidate genes or markers that can be used as a guide to the future studies attempting to breed salt tolerance sweetpotato cultivars.

Highlights

  • Purple-fleshed sweetpotato (PFSP) is one of the most important crops in the word which helps to bridge the food gap and contribute to solve the malnutrition problem especially in developing countries

  • Using second and third generation technology, Illumina sequencing generated 170,344,392 clean high-quality long reads that were assembled into 15,998 unigenes with an average length 2178 base pair which considered relatively longer than only Next generation sequencing (NGS) studies which ranged between 1000 and 1300 base pairs as an average length for the obtained sequence [16,17,18,19]

  • transcription factors (TFs) regulates the differentially expressed genes that related to salt stress tolerance and Protein kinases (PKs) act as a signal transductor/receptor proteins in membranes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Purple-fleshed sweetpotato (PFSP) is one of the most important crops in the word which helps to bridge the food gap and contribute to solve the malnutrition problem especially in developing countries. Purple-fleshed sweetpotato (PFSP) considered to be an important source for anthocyanin which displays strong antioxidant properties [1]. It is considered as an important staple source of calories and proteins which consumed by all age groups. Exposure of sweetpotato plants to salt stress resulting in problems such as ion imbalance, mineral deficiency, osmotic stress, ion toxicity and oxidative stress [3]. These conditions interact with several cellular components including DNA, protein, lipids and pigments.

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call