| Literature DB >> 35409091 |
Xiaolin Niu1, Daqi Fu1.
Abstract
Despite recent advancements in plant molecular biology and biotechnology, providing enough, and safe, food for an increasing world population remains a challenge. The research into plant development and environmental adaptability has attracted more and more attention from various countries. The transcription of some genes, regulated by transcript factors (TFs), and their response to biological and abiotic stresses, are activated or inhibited during plant development; examples include, rooting, flowering, fruit ripening, drought, flooding, high temperature, pathogen infection, etc. Therefore, the screening and characterization of transcription factors have increasingly become a hot topic in the field of plant research. BLH/BELL (BEL1-like homeodomain) transcription factors belong to a subfamily of the TALE (three-amino-acid-loop-extension) superfamily and its members are involved in the regulation of many vital biological processes, during plant development and environmental response. This review focuses on the advances in our understanding of the function of BLH/BELL TFs in different plants and their involvement in the development of meristems, flower, fruit, plant morphogenesis, plant cell wall structure, the response to the environment, including light and plant resistance to stress, biosynthesis and signaling of ABA (Abscisic acid), IAA (Indoleacetic acid), GA (Gibberellic Acid) and JA (Jasmonic Acid). We discuss the theoretical basis and potential regulatory models for BLH/BELL TFs' action and provide a comprehensive view of their multiple roles in modulating different aspects of plant development and response to environmental stress and phytohormones. We also present the value of BLHs in the molecular breeding of improved crop varieties and the future research direction of the BLH gene family.Entities:
Keywords: BLH/BELL; environmental stress; plant development; transcription factors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35409091 PMCID: PMC8998993 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23073731
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1(a) Schematic diagram of the structure of KNOX and BLH proteins. KNOX proteins contain an ELK domain, an HD domain and an MEINOX domain which is composed of KNOX1 and KNOX2. BLH proteins contain an HD domain, a VSLTLGL domain and an MID domain which is composed of SKY and BELL. (b) Phylogenetic tree of 54 BLH homologous proteins that have been functionally identified. A total of 54 BLH protein sequences were aligned with ClustalX 2.1 program, and the phylogenetic tree was constructed by Neighbor-Joining method. All BLHs are divided into three class and each class is represented by different colors. Class I subfamily is represented by blue, class II subfamily is represented by pink and class III subfamily is represented by green. Gene prefixes represent different species. (Pp: Physcomitrium patens; Vs: Vandenboschia speciose; At: Arabidopsis thaliana; Sl: Solanum lycopersicum; St: Solanum tuberosum; Os: Oryza sativa L.; Zm: Zea mays L.; Gh: Gossypium hirsutum L.; Gm: Glycine max L.; Md: Malus domestica L.; Mt: Medicago truncatula; Ps: Pisum sativum L.; Cch: Camellia chekiangoleosa; Ptr: Populus trichocarpa; Jr: Juglans regia L.; Pg: Punica granatum L.).
Identification and characterization of BLH genes in different plant species.
| Species | Gene | Characterized | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 4 |
| Sporophyte development | [ |
|
| 2 | / | Unknown | [ |
|
| 4 | / | Unknown | [ |
|
| 11 | Gametophytic and the sporophytic | [ | |
|
| 13 | Meristems and inflorescence development; plant morphogenesis; cell wall; ovules; embryo; light signal; abiotic stress and hormone signaling | [ | |
|
| 14 | Fruit chlorophyll; cell wall and hormone | [ | |
|
| 13 | Phloem-mobile mRNA signals; yield; | [ | |
| 14 | / | Unknown | [ | |
| 14 | Seed shattering; regulation of inflorescence architecture and meristem maintenance; Secondary cell wall biosynthesis; morphological | [ | ||
| 18 | Meristem maintenance; leaf morphology; | [ | ||
| 50 | Secondary cell wall biosynthesis; morphological development; drought stress; virus response and hormone signaling | [ | ||
| 34 |
| Morphological development; stress response; nodule development | [ | |
| 19 | plant morphogenesis; chlorophyll degradation; salt response; drought stress | [ | ||
|
| 14 | leaf morphology; nodulation | [ | |
| 14 | nodulation; hormone signaling | [ | ||
| 14 | / | Unknown | [ | |
|
| 12 |
| Fruit lignification | [ |
|
| 20 | Salt stress | [ | |
| 17 | Flower bud development | [ | ||
| 9 | Ovule development; inflorescence development; | [ | ||
| 12 | / | Unknown | [ | |
|
| 6 | / | Unknown | [ |
Figure 2Role of BLHs in plant development in different species. The composition of BLH in signaling pathways in plant development is divided into five aspects: development of plant meristems, development of flower, plant morphogenesis, development of plant cell walls and development of ovules, fruits and seeds. The main downstream genes are depicted in the diagram. Arrows indicate promotion and vertical lines indicate repression. Gene prefixes represent different species (At: Arabidopsis thaliana; Sl: Solanum lycopersicum; St: Solanum tuberosum; Gh: Gossypium hirsutum; Mt: Medicago truncatula; Ptr: Populus trichocarpa; Os: Oryza sativa; Gm: Glycine max L; Zm: Zea mays; Peu: Populus euphratica).
Figure 3Role of BLHs in light, stress and hormone signaling pathways. The composition of BLH signal pathway is divided into three parts, which is represented by three different colors. Light signals are described in green, stress signals in yellow and hormone signals in orange. The main downstream genes and downstream signaling pathways are described in rectangular boxes. BLH protein and its interacting proteins were described by oval box. Arrows indicate promotion and vertical lines indicate repression. Gene prefixes represent different species (At: Arabidopsis thaliana; Sl: Solanum lycopersicum; St: Solanum tuberosum; Gh: Gossypium hirsutum; Ps: Medicago truncatula; Os: Oryza sativa; Gm: Glycine max L.).