| Literature DB >> 35735623 |
Xiaohan Li1, Siyan Xu1, Martina Bianca Fuhrmann-Aoyagi1, Shaoze Yuan1, Takeru Iwama1, Misaki Kobayashi1, Kenji Miura1,2.
Abstract
Global warming and climate change have severely affected plant growth and food production. Therefore, minimizing these effects is required for sustainable crop yields. Understanding the molecular mechanisms in response to abiotic stresses and improving agricultural traits to make crops tolerant to abiotic stresses have been going on unceasingly. To generate desirable varieties of crops, traditional and molecular breeding techniques have been tried, but both approaches are time-consuming. Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat/Cas9 (CRISPR/Cas9) and transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) are genome-editing technologies that have recently attracted the attention of plant breeders for genetic modification. These technologies are powerful tools in the basic and applied sciences for understanding gene function, as well as in the field of crop breeding. In this review, we focus on the application of genome-editing systems in plants to understand gene function in response to abiotic stresses and to improve tolerance to abiotic stresses, such as temperature, drought, and salinity stresses.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR/Cas; TALEN; abiotic stress; drought; genome editing; salinity; temperature
Year: 2022 PMID: 35735623 PMCID: PMC9221872 DOI: 10.3390/cimb44060182
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Issues Mol Biol ISSN: 1467-3037 Impact factor: 2.976
Figure 1(A) A scheme of the TALEN architecture and genome-editing mechanism. Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALEN) are chimeric protein that works in pairs composed by a TAL effector DNA-binding domain merged to a nuclease domain from the FokI restriction enzyme. The TALEs have highly conserved and repetitive peptide modules containing up to 34 amino acids (represented by the colored bars). Each TALE repeat specifically recognizes one of the nucleotide bases, and multiple TALE repeats are combined to target a specific DNA sequence and generate a DNA double-strand break by FokI action within the intervening spacer region. (B) Overview of CRISPR/Cas9-mediated genome-editing mechanism for non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) repair. Guide RNA (gRNA) is designed to recognize the target sequence located upstream of the protospacer-associated motif (PAM), NGG in the case of CRISPR/Cas9, which serves as a binding signal for Cas9. When nucleotide base pairing occurs (due to the annealing of the target sequence with the protospacer region of the gRNA, represented in the figure by an orange line), the Cas9 enzyme is activated, causing DNA double-strand break. The breaks activate the intracellular repair systems of the cell, which convert breaks into insertion or deletion mutations. The mutations generally cause sequence failures and generate non-functional proteins. CRISPR-associated protein 9 (Cas9); guide RNA (gRNA); protospacer adjacent motif (PAM).
Application of CRISPR/Cas9-mediated genome editing to elucidate genes involved in response to temperature, drought, and salinity stresses.
| Plant Species | Target Genes | Gene Function | Phenotype | Mode of Application | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rice |
| Proline-rich protein | Cold sensitive | Mutants exhibited sensitive phenotype after treatment at 6 °C for 3 days. | [ |
| Rice |
| Transcription factor | Cold tolerance, increased panicle length, enlarged grain size | Mutants exhibited tolerance phenotype after treatment at 4 °C for 5–10 days. | [ |
| Arabidopsis |
| Transcription factor for abiotic stress responses | Extremely sensitive to freezing | Mutants exhibited sensitive phenotype after treatment at 4 °C and freezing for 7 days and freezing-sensitive phenotype after treatment at −7 °C for 1 h. | [ |
| Mutants exhibited sensitive phenotype after treatment at 4 °C for 50 days and freezing sensitive after treatment at −9 °C for 1 h and −10 °C for 1 h. | [ | ||||
| Tomato |
| Transcription factor for abiotic stress responses | More severe chilling injury symptoms | Mutants exhibited sensitive phenotype after treatment at 4 °C for 7 days. | [ |
| Rice |
| Annexin | Cold tolerance | Mutants exhibited tolerance phenotype after treatment at 4–6 °C for 3 days. | [ |
| Rice |
| Annexin | Cold tolerance | Mutants exhibited tolerance phenotype after treatment at 4–6 °C for 3 days. | [ |
| Rice |
| Fructokinase-like protein 2 | Heat sensitive | Mutants exhibited tolerance phenotype after treatment at 32 °C for 60 days. | [ |
| Tomato |
| Protein kinase, Ca2+ sensing | Heat sensitive, accumulation of ROS | Mutants exhibited sensitive phenotype and higher H2O2 content after treatment at 45 °C for 12 h. | [ |
| Tomato |
| MAP kinase upregulating HSPs’/HSFs’ genes’ expression | Heat tolerance, reduction of ROS accumulation | Mutants exhibited tolerance phenotype and lower H2O2 and O2•− contents after treatment at 42 °C for 1 day. | [ |
| Tomato |
| Transcription factor for brassinosteroid response | Heat tolerance | Mutants exhibited tolerance phenotype after treatment at 42 °C/38 °C (day/night) for 1 day. | [ |
| Rice |
| NAC transcription factor | Heat sensitive | Mutants exhibited sensitive phenotype after treatment at 42 °C for 4 days. | [ |
| Tomato |
| MADS-box | Parthenocarpy, tomato fruit under heat stress | Mutants exhibited facultative parthenocarpy phenotype after treatment under natural heat stress for 67 days. | [ |
| Tomato |
| Transcriptional regulator for auxin response | Parthenocarpy | Mutants exhibited parthenocarpy phenotype. | [ |
| Tomato |
| Transcriptional regulator for auxin response | Parthenocarpy | Mutants exhibited parthenocarpy phenotype. | [ |
| Tomato |
| Plant-specific transcription factors | Enhanced drought tolerance and reduced stomatal conductance | Mutants showed drought-tolerant phenotype under the 10-day watering cessation treatment. | [ |
| Tomato |
| Auxin response factors | Enhanced drought tolerance and stem thickness | Mutants showed drought-tolerant phenotype under the 12-day watering-off treatment. | [ |
| Arabidopsis | ABA-induced transcription repressors | Enhanced drought and salt tolerance, reduced ABA sensitivity | Mutants showed drought-tolerant phenotype after 12-day watering off treatment and 2 days of rewatering. | [ | |
| Arabidopsis |
| Stomatal opening regulator | Enhanced drought tolerance and stomatal closure | Mutants showed a lower water loss rate than the wild type after 5 h of normal treatment. | [ |
| Arabidopsis |
| ABA-responsive element-binding protein | Enhanced drought tolerance and chlorophyll content | Mutants showed drought-tolerant phenotype under 20% humidity treatment or 20-day cessation of watering. | [ |
| Maize |
| Negative regulator of ethylene responses | Enhanced drought tolerance, increased grain yield | Mutants sown on soil with only normal 15% moisture showed drought-tolerant phenotype. | [ |
| Rice |
| ABA signaling and the dehydration response | Enhanced response to drought stress through stomatal regulation | Mutants showed drought-tolerant phenotype under the 8-day watering-off treatment. | [ |
| Rice |
| Regulation of leaf rolling | Enhanced drought tolerance and ABA level | Mutants showed drought-tolerant phenotype under 30-day water-deficient treatment. | [ |
| Tomato |
| A special receptor of salicylic acid | Reduced drought tolerance, increased stomatal aperture | Mutants showed drought-sensitive phenotype without watering for 6 consecutive days. | [ |
| Tomato |
| Mitogen-activated protein kinases | Reduced drought tolerance, severe wilting symptom | Mutants showed drought-sensitive phenotype without watering for 5 consecutive days. | [ |
| Soybean |
| MYB transcription factor family | Reduced drought and salinity tolerance | Mutants showed drought-sensitive phenotype after 14-day no water treatment. | [ |
| Rice |
| U-box E3 ubiquitin ligase | Reduced drought tolerance | Mutants showed drought-sensitive phenotype after 10-day no water treatment at tillering stage. | [ |
| Rice |
| Osmotic stress/ABA–activated protein kinase | Reduced drought tolerance, ROS scavenging was inhibited | Mutants showed drought-sensitive phenotype after 7-day no water treatment. | [ |
| Rice |
| Involved in both cytokinin signal transduction and metabolism | Enhanced salinity tolerance | Mutants showed salinity-tolerant phenotype under concentrations of 0.75% NaCl solution treatment. | [ |
| Rice |
| Key enzyme of xanthophyll cycle | Enhanced salinity tolerance, reduced water loss | Mutants showed salinity-tolerant phenotype at 100 mM NaCl application. | [ |
| Rice |
| Drought and salt tolerance gene | Enhanced salinity tolerance, showed significantly broader leaf width and enhanced leaf area | Mutants showed salinity-tolerant phenotype at 200 mM NaCl application. | [ |
| Rice |
| NAC transcription factor | Reduced salinity tolerance, enhanced MDA content | Mutants showed salinity-sensitive phenotype at 150 mM NaCl application. | [ |
| Tomato |
| A subgroup of putative plant cell wall glycoproteins | Enhanced salinity tolerance and stem length | Mutants showed salinity-tolerant phenotype at 100 mM and150 mM NaCl application. | [ |
| Tomato |
| Auxin response factor | Enhanced salinity tolerance, delayed flowering, increased height and leaf curling | Mutants showed salinity-tolerant phenotype at 250 mM NaCl application. | [ |
| Arabidopsis |
| ABA-induced transcription repressors | Enhanced salinity tolerance, reduced ABA sensitivity | Mutants showed salinity-tolerant phenotype at 150 mM NaCl application. | [ |
| Arabidopsis |
| A toll-interleukin1 receptor-nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat class protein | Enhanced salinity tolerance and chlorophyll content | Mutants showed salinity-tolerant phenotype at 250 mM NaCl application. | [ |
| wheat |
| Histone acetyltransferase | Reduced salinity tolerance, more chlorotic leaves and higher Na+ content in the mutants | Mutants showed salinity-sensitive phenotype at 200 mM NaCl application. | [ |
| Potato |
| A main structural protein controlling the formation, composition, and activity of subnuclear Cajal bodies | Enhanced salinity tolerance, slower yellowing and leaf fall | Mutants showed salinity-tolerant phenotype at 300 mM NaCl application. | [ |
| Soybean |
| ABA-induced transcription repressors | Enhanced salinity tolerance, more sensitivity to ABA | Mutants showed salinity-tolerant phenotype at 200 mM NaCl application. | [ |
Comparison of the delivery of the CRISPR/Cas9 expression cassette.
| Delivery Method | Characteristics | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Time-consuming and laborious, regeneration protocols required | ||
| Viral delivery method | Use of virus-based vectors for transient expression | Limited loading capacity, species-specific restriction |
| Nanoparticle delivery method | Use of nanoparticle–DNA complex for delivery of DNA | Difficult to deliver the complete CRISPR/Cas9 expression cassette through the cell wall |
| DNA-, RNA-, and/or protein-coated particles bombarding plant tissue | Regeneration required |