| Literature DB >> 33882825 |
Sadhana Singh1, Himabindu Kudapa2, Vanika Garg1, Rajeev K Varshney3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chickpea, pigeonpea, and groundnut are the primary legume crops of semi-arid tropics (SAT) and their global productivity is severely affected by drought stress. The plant-specific NAC (NAM - no apical meristem, ATAF - Arabidopsis transcription activation factor, and CUC - cup-shaped cotyledon) transcription factor family is known to be involved in majority of abiotic stresses, especially in the drought stress tolerance mechanism. Despite the knowledge available regarding NAC function, not much information is available on NAC genes in SAT legume crops.Entities:
Keywords: Chickpea; Drought tolerance; Groundnut; Legumes; NACs; Phylogenetics; Pigeonpea; cis-acting regulatory elements (CARE)
Year: 2021 PMID: 33882825 PMCID: PMC8059324 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-021-07602-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1Graphical representation of chromosomal localization of NAC genes in three legume crops using MapChart 2.3.2. a Representation of chromosomal localization in chickpea NAC genes. A total of 62 NAC genes are mapped to eight chromosomes (Ch). The exact position of each chickpea NAC genes (Ca_NAC) can be estimated using scale on the left (Mbp). b Representation of chromosomal localization in pigeonpea NAC genes. A total of 49 NAC genes are distributed among eleven chromosomes (Ch). The position of each pigeonpea NAC gene (Cc_NAC) can be estimated using scale on the left (Mbp). c Representation of chromosomal localization in groundnut NAC genes. A total of 166 NAC genes are distributed among twenty chromosomes (Ch). The position of each groundnut NAC gene (Ah_NAC) can be estimated using scale on the left (Mbp)
Identified putative membrane-bound NAC proteins in chickpea, pigeonpea, and groundnut and predicted number of transmembrane helices (TMHs) using TMHMM v2.0
| Gene name | Length (aa) | Number of predicted TMHs | Transmembrane sequences (position) | Expected number, TMHs AAs | Expected number, first 60 AAs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | 624 | 2 | 535–552; 600–622 | 38.70603 | 0 |
| | 558 | 1 | 530–552 | 21.93664 | 0.00065 |
| | 577 | 1 | 552–574 | 20.90645 | 0.0002 |
| | 612 | 1 | 585–607 | 22.28558 | 0.00171 |
| | 610 | 1 | 582–604 | 22.60723 | 0 |
| | 625 | 1 | 533–552 | 35.48482 | 0 |
| | 627 | 1 | 535–554 | 34.48751 | 0 |
| | 572 | 1 | 548–570 | 22.73951 | 0.00529 |
| | 480 | 1 | 456–478 | 22.28638 | 0.00195 |
| | 567 | 1 | 538–560 | 22.04413 | 0.00047 |
| | 215 | 1 | 151–173 | 22.67864 | 0.00049 |
| | 349 | 1 | 326–348 | 21.84267 | 0.08532 |
| | 589 | 1 | 564–586 | 21.13549 | 0 |
| | 678 | 2 | 582–604; 656–675 | 41.84687 | 0 |
| | 481 | 1 | 458–480 | 19.08509 | 0.00479 |
| | 592 | 1 | 569–591 | 22.56847 | 0.01598 |
| | 499 | 1 | 471–493 | 22.12064 | 0.00134 |
| | 481 | 1 | 458–480 | 19.08496 | 0.00479 |
| | 607 | 2 | 499–518; 586–605 | 40.88282 | 0 |
| | 457 | 1 | 418–440 | 22.51853 | 0.0084 |
| | 583 | 2 | 531–553; 558–580 | 40.01905 | 0 |
| | 709 | 1 | 680–702 | 22.56598 | 0.01784 |
| | 583 | 2 | 531–553; 558–580 | 39.30286 | 0 |
| | 634 | 2 | 525–544; 611–633 | 43.36892 | 0 |
| | 698 | 1 | 669–691 | 22.60288 | 0.01785 |
| | 592 | 1 | 569–591 | 22.56383 | 0.01596 |
| | 679 | 2 | 581–603; 657–676 | 41.33532 | 0 |
| | 444 | 1 | 406–428 | 22.49211 | 0.01105 |
Fig. 2Comparative analysis of orthologous relationship of NAC genes. a Chickpea b Pigeonpea c Groundnut with Medicago truncatula and Glycine max. Gene orthologs are illustrated using circos [34]. Origin of the strokes represent chromosomal locations of the respective NAC genes, while the strokes represent the orthologous genes of Medicago truncatula and Glycine max
Fig. 3Phylogenetic tree of NAC genes in three legume crops. a The phylogenetic tree of NAC genes from chickpea (Ca_NAC) was constructed using all 72 protein sequences in MEGA7.0 using the Neighbor-Joining (NJ) method with 1000 bootstrap replicates. Bootstrap values are displayed next to the branch nodes. b The phylogenetic tree of NAC genes from pigeonpea (Cc_NAC) was constructed using all 96 protein sequences in MEGA7.0 using the Neighbor-Joining (NJ) method with 1000 bootstrap replicates. Bootstrap values are displayed next to the branch nodes. c The phylogenetic tree of NAC genes from groundnut (Ah_NAC) was constructed using all 166 protein sequences in MEGA7.0 using the Neighbor-Joining (NJ) method with 1000 bootstrap replicates. Bootstrap values are displayed next to the branch nodes
Fig. 4Phylogenetic relationship of putative stress-responsive NAC genes of chickpea (22), pigeonpea (31), and groundnut (33) with well-known stress-responsive NAC genes (43) from Arabidopsis thaliana, Oryza sativa, Medicago truncatula and Glycine max using MEGA7.0. The bar indicates the relative divergence of the sequences examined. Stress-responsiveness of each NAC gene from model crops species is shown next to its name in parentheses. D-dehydration/drought; S-salt stress; C-cold stress; H-heat stress; ABA-abscisic acid; JA-jasmonic acid; SA-salicylic acid; MMS-methyl methane sulfonate
Identified stress-responsive NAC genes/proteins from phylogenetic analysis with known NAC genes (stress-responsive) from model crop species using MEGA 7.0 along with their description and distribution of conserved motifs domains in chickpea, pigeonpea, and groundnut using MEME standalone version 5.0.2
| Predicted stress-responsive NAC genes | Description | Total number of motifs | Subdomain (DNA binding NAC domain) |
|---|---|---|---|
| | NAC domain-containing protein 72 | 6 | DE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 72 | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 2 | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 2-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 2-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC transcription factor 29-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC transcription factor 29 | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC transcription factor 25-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC transcription factor 29 | 6 | ACDE |
| | NAC transcription factor 25-like | 5 | ACDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 7-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 7-like | 6 | ACDE |
| | Uncharacterized protein LOC101492664 isoform X1 | 6 | ABCDE |
| | Protein NTM1-like 9 | 6 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 69-like isoform X1 | 5 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 40-like | 6 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 53 isoform X2 | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 78 isoform X1 | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 78-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC transcription factor ONAC010 | 6 | ABDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 16-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 45-like | 6 | ABDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 78 | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 72-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 72-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 72-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 78 | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 78 | 6 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 78 | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 104-like | 6 | ABCD |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 2-like | 7 | ABDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 104-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 2-like | 6 | ABDE |
| | NAC transcription factor 29-like | 6 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 62-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 2-like | 6 | ABCDE |
| | NAC transcription factor 29-like isoform X2 | 6 | ABCDE |
| | NAC transcription factor 29-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 83-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 82-like | 5 | CDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 78 | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 2-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 7-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | Putative NAC domain-containing protein 94 | 5 | CDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 41-like | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 41-like isoform X2 | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 78 | 9 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 2, partial | 5 | ABD |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 74 | 6 | ABD |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 78 (ANAC078) | 7 | ABDE |
| | NAC transcription factor ONAC010 | 5 | BCDE |
| | NAC transcription factor ONAC010 | 2 | AB |
| | NAC transcription factor NAM-2 (HvNAM-2) | 5 | ABCD |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 45-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 30 | 5 | AB |
| | NAC domain-containing 104-like | 6 | ABCDE |
| | Protein BEARSKIN2 | 9 | ABCDE |
| | hypothetical protein Ahy_B03g067340 | 9 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 90-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 86-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 83 isoform X1 | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 35 | 5 | ABE |
| | NAC transcription factor | 3 | AB |
| | NAC domain-containing 90-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC transcription factor 29-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | Protein CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON 1 isoform X1 | 9 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 71 | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 83 isoform X1 | 8 | ABCDE |
| | Protein CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON 1 | 9 | ABCDE |
| | NAC transcription factor 25-like | 5 | ABE |
| | NAC domain-containing 72-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 82-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 30 | 6 | ABE |
| | NAC domain-containing protein 35 | 10 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 100 | 7 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 82-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 104-like | 6 | ABCDE |
| | NAC transcription factor 29-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 86-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC transcription factor | 4 | CDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 26-like | 4 | AB |
| | NAC domain-containing 2 | 6 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 2 | 6 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 90-like | 8 | ABCDE |
| | NAC domain-containing 26-like | 4 | AB |
| | NAC domain-containing 90-like | 8 | ABCDE |
Fig. 5Representation of motifs of predicted stress-related NACs in three legume crops using MEME standalone version 5.0.2. The conserved motifs of NAC genes from SAT legumes (a) chickpea (b) pigeonpea (c) groundnut. The bit score represents the information content for each position in the sequence
Fig. 6Representation of exon/intron structures of putatively predicted stress-associated NAC genes from (a) chickpea (b) pigeonpea (c) groundnut using GSDS 2.0 (Gene Structure Display Server). Exons and introns are represented by colored boxes and black lines, respectively. The sizes of exons and introns can be estimated using the scale below
Fig. 7Representation of heatmaps viewed in MeV tool version 4.9.0 for expression patterns of identified stress-responsive NAC genes of the three legume crops. a Heatmap representation for expression of identified stress-responsive Ca_NAC genes across different tissues from germinating, seedling, vegetative, reproductive and senescence stages in chickpea. The expression data generated by RNA sequencing of plumule, radicle, shoot, leaf, bud, stem, nodule, root, etc., tissues at various stages were obtained from Cicer arietinum gene expression atlas (CaGEA) [35]. Yellow and blue color gradients indicate an increase or decrease, respectively, in transcript abundance represented in log2 values. Ger-germinating; Sed-seedling; Veg-vegetative; Rep-reproductive; Sen-senescence. b Heatmap representation for expression of putative stress-responsive Cc_NAC genes in various tissues of pigeonpea. The expression data generated by Illumina sequencing of RNA-seq libraries prepared from shoot, leaf, stem, root, bud, nodule, embryo, seed, pod, etc., tissues across different stages were obtained from Cajanus cajan gene expression atlas (CcGEA) [36]. Yellow and blue color gradients indicate an increase or decrease, respectively, in transcript abundance represented in log2 values. Veg-vegetative; Rep-reproductive; SAM-shoot apical meristem; Mat-mature. c Heatmap showing expression of predicted stress-responsive Ah_NAC genes in various tissues at different stages (germinal, seedling, vegetative reproductive, and senescence) of groundnut. The expression data generated by Illumina sequencing of RNA-seq libraries prepared from cotyledon, embryo, shoot, root, bud, nodule, embryo, seed, pod wall, etc., tissues at different stages were obtained from Arachis hypogea gene expression atlas (AhGEA) [37]. Yellow and blue color gradients indicate an increase or decrease, respectively, in transcript abundance represented in log2 values. Veg-vegetative; Seeds_5-seeds after 5 days of planting; Seeds_25- seeds after 25 days of planting
Fig. 8Validation of expression profiles of selected NAC genes in contrasting drought-responsive genotypes of the three legume crops. a Expression of selected Ca_NAC genes in chickpea root tissues under drought stress treatment. Expression data were obtained by qRT-PCR of drought-stressed and well-watered root samples of 30-day-old chickpea plants. Root tissues were collected after six days of drought induction. Mean relative expression levels were normalized to a value of 1 in control root samples. Fourteen of fifteen selected genes (except Ca_05227) were examined. Error bars = SE values of two biological replicates and three technical replicates. Significant differences were determined by Student’s t-test at P ≤ 0.05. b Expression of selected Cc_NAC genes in pigeonpea root tissues under drought stress treatment. Expression data were obtained by qRT-PCR of drought-stressed and well-watered root samples of 30-day-old pigeonpea plants. Root tissues were collected after six days of drought induction. Mean relative expression levels were normalized to a value of 1 in control root samples. Error bars = SE values of two biological replicates and three technical replicates. Significant differences were determined by Student’s t-test at P ≤ 0.05. (c) Expression of selected Ah_NAC genes in groundnut root tissues under drought stress treatment. Expression data were obtained by qRT-PCR of drought-stressed and well-watered root samples of 30-day-old groundnut plants. Root tissues were collected after six days of drought induction. Fourteen selected genes were examined. Mean relative expression levels were normalized to a value of 1 in control root samples. Error bars = SE values of two biological replicates and three technical replicates. Significant differences were determined by Student’s t-test at P ≤ 0.05