Overexpression of an SKn-dehydrin gene from Eucalyptus globulus and Eucalyptus nitens enhances tolerance to freezing stress in Arabidopsis
Key message This work contributes in the identification and understanding of dehydrin genes and their function in the mechanisms of cold tolerance in eucalypt species. Dehydrins play a fundamental role in plant response and adaptation to abiotic stresses, having an important role in seed desiccation...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Trees (Berlin, West) West), 2016-10, Vol.30 (5), p.1785-1797 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Key message
This work contributes in the identification and understanding of dehydrin genes and their function in the mechanisms of cold tolerance in eucalypt species.
Dehydrins play a fundamental role in plant response and adaptation to abiotic stresses, having an important role in seed desiccation, response to abscisic acid, low temperatures, drought and salinity conditions.
Eucalyptus nitens
has a greater tolerance to cold than
Eucalyptus globulus,
which in part can be due to the role of dehydrins present in this species. This work reports the identification of four DHN genes in
E. nitens
and examines their response under low temperature, comparing them to those previously described in
E. globulus
. Transcript abundance of dehydrins increased when plants were cold acclimated, being higher in a freezing-resistant family of
E. nitens
than in a freezing-sensitive family. The relative levels of
dhn
s in
E. nitens
were higher than the corresponding of
E. globulus
under the same conditions. The analysis of the promoter region for the four
Enidhns
showed that they contained several cold-or dehydration inducible
cis
elements, such as ABRE, MYC and CRT. The analyzes in the genomic sequence of
dhn
from
E. globulus
and
E. nitens
, together with the results of transcript abundance under cold acclimation, can be in part explained by differences found at the
cis
elements in the several DHN promoters studied. The most responsive gene to cold tolerance in both species was
DHN2
, which was used to obtain transgenic
Arabidopsis thaliana
containing either the coding region or the putative promoter. The
EniDHN2
lines had higher transcript abundance than the
A. thaliana
with the
EuglDHN2
, although in both cases the transgenic lines had a higher survival rate to cold than the untransformed
A. thaliana
. In addition the
EniDHN2
putative promoter drive induced higher expression levels of the gene (gus) marker than the one of
E. globulus
, when exposed to cold temperatures. Therefore, we hypothesize that the putative promoter of
EniDHN2
and its coding region has a key role in conferring cold tolerance to this species. |
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ISSN: | 0931-1890 1432-2285 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00468-016-1410-9 |