| Literature DB >> 23766697 |
Hikmet Budak1, Melda Kantar, Kuaybe Yucebilgili Kurtoglu.
Abstract
The genus Triticum includes bread (Triticum aestivum) and durum wheat (Triticum durum) and constitutes a major source for human food consumption. Drought is currently the leading threat on world's food supply, limiting crop yield, and is complicated since drought tolerance is a quantitative trait with a complex phenotype affected by the plant's developmental stage. Drought tolerance is crucial to stabilize and increase food production since domestication has limited the genetic diversity of crops including wild wheat, leading to cultivated species, adapted to artificial environments, and lost tolerance to drought stress. Improvement for drought tolerance can be achieved by the introduction of drought-grelated genes and QTLs to modern wheat cultivars. Therefore, identification of candidate molecules or loci involved in drought tolerance is necessary, which is undertaken by "omics" studies and QTL mapping. In this sense, wild counterparts of modern varieties, specifically wild emmer wheat (T. dicoccoides), which are highly tolerant to drought, hold a great potential. Prior to their introgression to modern wheat cultivars, drought related candidate genes are first characterized at the molecular level, and their function is confirmed via transgenic studies. After integration of the tolerance loci, specific environment targeted field trials are performed coupled with extensive analysis of morphological and physiological characteristics of developed cultivars, to assess their performance under drought conditions and their possible contributions to yield in certain regions. This paper focuses on recent advances on drought related gene/QTL identification, studies on drought related molecular pathways, and current efforts on improvement of wheat cultivars for drought tolerance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23766697 PMCID: PMC3671283 DOI: 10.1155/2013/548246
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Transcript, protein, metabolite profiling studies conducted in the last three years.
| Species | Cultivars | Tissue | Drought stress application | Method | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Drought tolerance: Plainsman V: tolerant; Kobomugi: sensitive | Root | Moderate drought stress applied on tillering stage | cDNA microarray | [ |
|
| Drought tolerance: information can not be accessed | Grain | Short water shortage in early grain development | cDNA microarray | [ |
|
| Efficiency of stem reserve mobilization in peduncles: N49: tolerant; N14: sensitive | Stem | Progressive drought stress after anthesis | 2D gel and MS | [ |
|
| Cultivar Vinjett | Grain | Drought applied at terminal spiklet or at anthesis | 2D gel and MS | [ |
|
| Yield under drought: Excalibur: tolerant; RAC875: tolerant; | Leaf | Cyclic drought applied after first flag leaf formation mimicking field conditions | SCX column HPLC and MS | [ |
|
| Able to acquire drought tolerance: Ofanto: tolerant | Leaf | Drought applied at booting stage (controls SWC: irrigated when it decreases %50 of field capacity; drought SWC: irrigated when it decreases %12.5 of field capacity) | cDNA-AFLP | [ |
|
| Drought tolerance: Om Rabia3: tolerant; Mahmoudi: sensitive | Embryo | Drought applied at final development stage of seed maturity | 2D gel and HPRP column and MS | [ |
|
| Yield under drought conditions: Y12-3: tolerant; A24-39: sensitive | Leaf | Terminal drought applied at inflorescence emergence stage | Transcript profiling | [ |
|
| Yield under drought conditions: Y12-3: tolerant; A24-39: sensitive | Leaf | Drought applied after germination at five/six leaf stage | Transcript and metabolite profiling | [ |
|
| Drought tolerance: TR39477: tolerant; TR38828: tolerant | Leaf/root | Shock drought stress | miRNA profiling | [ |
T: Triticum; SWC: soil water content; 2D: 2-dimensional; SCX: strong cation exchange; HPLC: high performance liquid chromatography; MS: mass spectrometry; cDNA: complementary DNA; AFLP: amplified fragment length polymorphisms; HPRP: human prion protein.
List of identified and characterized drought related genes in the last three years.
| Gene | Function | Related mechanism/stress | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| TaPIMP1 | Transcription factor: R2R3 type MYB TF | Drought | [ |
| TaSRG | Transcription factor: | Drought | [ |
| TaMYB3R1 | Transcription factor: MYB3R type MYB TF | drought | [ |
| TaNAC (NAM/ATAF/CUC) | Transcription factor: plant specific NAC (NAM/ATAF/CUC) TF | Drought | [ |
| TaMYB33 | Transcription factor: R2R3 type MYB TF | Drought | [ |
| TaWRKY2, TaWRKY19 | Transcription factor: WRKY type TF | Drought | [ |
| TdicDRF1 | Transcription factor: DRE binding protein | Drought | [ |
| TaABC1 | Kinase: protein kinase ABC1 (activity of bc(1) complex) | Drought | [ |
| TaSnRK2.4 | Kinase: SNF1 type serine/threonine protein kinase | Drought | [ |
| TaSnRK2.7 | Kinase: SNF1 type serine/threonine protein kinase | drought | [ |
| TdTMKP1 | Phosphatase: MAP kinase phosphatase | Drought | [ |
| TaCHP | CHP rich zinc finger protein with unknown function | ABA-dependent and -independent pathways | [ |
| TaCP | Protein degradation: cysteine protease | Drought | [ |
| TaEXPR23 | Cell wall expansion: expansin | Water retention ability and osmotic potential | [ |
| TaL5 | Nucleocytoplasmic transport of 5S ribosomal RNA: ribosomal L5 gene | Drought | [ |
| TdPIP1;1, TdPIP1;2 | Protective protein: aquaporin | Drought | [ |
| TdicATG8 | Autophagy: autophagy related gene 8 | Drought | [ |
| TdicTMPIT1 | Autophagy: integral transmembrane protein inducible by TNF- | Drought | [ |
|
| Enhanced response to ABA, | Drought | [ |
Ta: Triticum aestivum; Td: Triticum durum; Tdic: Triticum dicoccoides; DRE: drought related element; SNF: Sucrose nonfermenting; MAP: mitogen activated protein; ABA: abscisic acid; CHP: cysteine histidine proline; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor α; PIMP: pathogen induced membrane protein; CP: cysteine protease; EXPR: expansin; PIP: plasma membrane intrinsic proteins.
List of genes confirmed to function in drought by transgenic studies in last three years.
| Type of transgenic study | Source of the gene | Gene | Function | Related mechanism/stress | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overexpression in | From | WRKY2, WRKY19 | Transcription factor: WRKY type TF | Drought | [ |
| Overexpression in | From | MYB33 | transcription factor: R2R3 type MYB TF | Drought | [ |
| Overexpression in | From | PIMP1 | Transcription factor: R2R3 type MYB TF | Drought | [ |
| Overexpression in | From | NAC (NAM/ATAF /CUC) | Transcription factor: plant-specific NAC (NAM/ATAF/CUC) TF | Drought | [ |
| Overexpression in | From | ABC1 | Kinase: protein kinase ABC1 (activity of bc(1) complex) | Drought | [ |
| Overexpression in | From | SnRK2.4 | Kinase: SNF1-type serine/threonine protein kinase | Drought | [ |
| Overexpression in | From | SnRK2.7 | Kinase: SNF1-type serine/threonine protein kinase | Drought | [ |
| Overexpression in | From | CP | Protein degradation: cysteine protease | Drought | [ |
| Overexpression in | From | CHP | CHP rich zinc finger protein with unknown function | ABA-dependent and -independent pathways | [ |
| Overexpression in | From | EXPR23 | Cell wall expansion: expansin | Water retention ability and osmotic potential | [ |
| Overexpression in | From | TaSIP | Salt induced protein with unknown function | Drought and salinity | [ |
| Overexpression in | From | PIP1;1, PIP1;2 | Protective protein: aquaporin | Drought | [ |
| Overexpression in | From | HVAI | Protective protein: LEA | Drought | [ |
| Transgenic ubiquitin: TaCHP | — | CHP | CHP rich zinc finger protein with unknown function | ABA-dependent and -independent pathways | [ |
| TaABA08′OF1 deletion line | — | ABA08 | ABA catabolism: | Drought | [ |
| VIGS silencing in | — | ATG8 | Autophagy: autophagy related gene 8 | Drought | [ |
| VIGS silencing in | — |
| Enhanced response to ABA, inositol polyphosphate 1-phosphatase | Drought | [ |
ABA: abscisic acid; CHP: cysteine histidine proline; SNF: sucrose nonfermenting; PIMP: pathogen induced membrane protein; CP: cysteine protease; EXPR: expansin; PIP: plasma membrane intrinsic proteins; LEA: late embryogenesis abundant; HVA: Hordeum vulgare aleurone; TaSIP: Triticum aestivum salt induced protein; VIGS: virus induced gene silencing.
Figure 1ABA-dependent and ABA-independent pathways of stress response. MYB and DREB TFs are given as examples to ABA-dependent and-independent routes. While ABA-dependent pathways appear to recruit antioxidant and osmoprotectant mechanisms, ABA-independent pathways generally involve protective proteins. NAC and WRKY TFs provide crosstalk between these pathways; where some members, such as TaNAC4 and TaNAC6, may predominantly act in an ABA-dependent fashion, some members may be closer to ABA-independent pathways. In several cases, such as TaWRKY19, both pathways are employed. It should be noted that both pathways are highly intermingled, and functions of several regulators, such as TaNAC2a, as well as entire pathways are yet to be elucidated.