| Literature DB >> 29495079 |
Neng-Hui Ye1,2,3, Feng-Zhu Wang4, Lu Shi5, Mo-Xian Chen3, Yun-Ying Cao6, Fu-Yuan Zhu7, Yi-Zhen Wu8, Li-Juan Xie4, Tie-Yuan Liu8, Ze-Zhuo Su4, Shi Xiao4, Hao Zhang9, Jianchang Yang9, Hai-Yong Gu10, Xuan-Xuan Hou2, Qi-Juan Hu3, Hui-Juan Yi6, Chang-Xiang Zhu2, Jianhua Zhang3,11, Ying-Gao Liu2.
Abstract
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) has two ecotypes, upland and lowland rice, that have been observed to show different tolerance levels under flooding stress. In this study, two rice cultivars, upland (Up221, flooding-intolerant) and lowland (Low88, flooding-tolerant), were initially used to study their molecular mechanisms in response to flooding germination. We observed that variations in the OsCBL10 promoter sequences in these two cultivars might contribute to this divergence in flooding tolerance. Further analysis using another eight rice cultivars revealed that the OsCBL10 promoter could be classified as either a flooding-tolerant type (T-type) or a flooding-intolerant type (I-type). The OsCBL10 T-type promoter only existed in japonica lowland cultivars, whereas the OsCBL10 I-type promoter existed in japonica upland, indica upland and indica lowland cultivars. Flooding-tolerant rice cultivars containing the OsCBL10 T-type promoter have shown lower Ca2+ flow and higher α-amylase activities in comparison to those in flooding-intolerant cultivars. Furthermore, the OsCBL10 overexpression lines were sensitive to both flooding and hypoxic treatments during rice germination with enhanced Ca2+ flow in comparison to wild-type. Subsequent findings also indicate that OsCBL10 may affect OsCIPK15 protein abundance and its downstream pathways. In summary, our results suggest that the adaptation to flooding stress during rice germination is associated with two different OsCBL10 promoters, which in turn affect OsCBL10 expression in different cultivars and negatively affect OsCIPK15 protein accumulation and its downstream cascade.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990Oryza sativazzm321990; calcium signaling; flooding tolerance; hypoxia stress; natural variation; seed germination
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29495079 DOI: 10.1111/tpj.13881
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant J ISSN: 0960-7412 Impact factor: 6.417