Early Drought-Responsive Genes Are Variable and Relevant to Drought Tolerance

Cheng He(Kansas State University), Yicong Du, Junjie Fu(Institute of Crop Sciences), Erliang Zeng(University of Iowa), Sunghun Park(Kansas State University), Frank F. White(University of Florida), Jun Zheng(Institute of Crop Sciences), Sanzhen Liu(Kansas State University)
G3 Genes Genomes Genetics
March 12, 2020
Cited by 26Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Abstract Drought stress is an important crop yield limiting factor worldwide. Plant physiological responses to drought stress are driven by changes in gene expression. While drought-responsive genes (DRGs) have been identified in maize, regulation patterns of gene expression during progressive water deficits remain to be elucidated. In this study, we generated time-series transcriptomic data from the maize inbred line B73 under well-watered and drought conditions. Comparisons between the two conditions identified 8,626 DRGs and the stages (early, middle, and late drought) at which DRGs occurred. Different functional groups of genes were regulated at the three stages. Specifically, early and middle DRGs display higher copy number variation among diverse Zea mays lines, and they exhibited stronger associations with drought tolerance as compared to late DRGs. In addition, correlation of expression between small RNAs (sRNAs) and DRGs from the same samples identified 201 negatively sRNA/DRG correlated pairs, including genes showing high levels of association with drought tolerance, such as two glutamine synthetase genes, gln2 and gln6. The characterization of dynamic gene responses to progressive drought stresses indicates important adaptive roles of early and middle DRGs, as well as roles played by sRNAs in gene expression regulation upon drought stress.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis