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Spatial distribution of transcript changes in the maize primary root elongation zone at low water potential

BACKGROUND: Previous work showed that the maize primary root adapts to low Ψ(w )(-1.6 MPa) by maintaining longitudinal expansion in the apical 3 mm (region 1), whereas in the adjacent 4 mm (region 2) longitudinal expansion reaches a maximum in well-watered roots but is progressively inhibited at low...

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Autores principales: Spollen, William G, Tao, Wenjing, Valliyodan, Babu, Chen, Kegui, Hejlek, Lindsey G, Kim, Jong-Joo, LeNoble, Mary E, Zhu, Jinming, Bohnert, Hans J, Henderson, David, Schachtman, Daniel P, Davis, Georgia E, Springer, Gordon K, Sharp, Robert E, Nguyen, Henry T
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2364623/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18387193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-8-32
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author Spollen, William G
Tao, Wenjing
Valliyodan, Babu
Chen, Kegui
Hejlek, Lindsey G
Kim, Jong-Joo
LeNoble, Mary E
Zhu, Jinming
Bohnert, Hans J
Henderson, David
Schachtman, Daniel P
Davis, Georgia E
Springer, Gordon K
Sharp, Robert E
Nguyen, Henry T
author_facet Spollen, William G
Tao, Wenjing
Valliyodan, Babu
Chen, Kegui
Hejlek, Lindsey G
Kim, Jong-Joo
LeNoble, Mary E
Zhu, Jinming
Bohnert, Hans J
Henderson, David
Schachtman, Daniel P
Davis, Georgia E
Springer, Gordon K
Sharp, Robert E
Nguyen, Henry T
author_sort Spollen, William G
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Previous work showed that the maize primary root adapts to low Ψ(w )(-1.6 MPa) by maintaining longitudinal expansion in the apical 3 mm (region 1), whereas in the adjacent 4 mm (region 2) longitudinal expansion reaches a maximum in well-watered roots but is progressively inhibited at low Ψ(w). To identify mechanisms that determine these responses to low Ψ(w), transcript expression was profiled in these regions of water-stressed and well-watered roots. In addition, comparison between region 2 of water-stressed roots and the zone of growth deceleration in well-watered roots (region 3) distinguished stress-responsive genes in region 2 from those involved in cell maturation. RESULTS: Responses of gene expression to water stress in regions 1 and 2 were largely distinct. The largest functional categories of differentially expressed transcripts were reactive oxygen species and carbon metabolism in region 1, and membrane transport in region 2. Transcripts controlling sucrose hydrolysis distinguished well-watered and water-stressed states (invertase vs. sucrose synthase), and changes in expression of transcripts for starch synthesis indicated further alteration in carbon metabolism under water deficit. A role for inositols in the stress response was suggested, as was control of proline metabolism. Increased expression of transcripts for wall-loosening proteins in region 1, and for elements of ABA and ethylene signaling were also indicated in the response to water deficit. CONCLUSION: The analysis indicates that fundamentally different signaling and metabolic response mechanisms are involved in the response to water stress in different regions of the maize primary root elongation zone.
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spelling pubmed-23646232008-05-02 Spatial distribution of transcript changes in the maize primary root elongation zone at low water potential Spollen, William G Tao, Wenjing Valliyodan, Babu Chen, Kegui Hejlek, Lindsey G Kim, Jong-Joo LeNoble, Mary E Zhu, Jinming Bohnert, Hans J Henderson, David Schachtman, Daniel P Davis, Georgia E Springer, Gordon K Sharp, Robert E Nguyen, Henry T BMC Plant Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Previous work showed that the maize primary root adapts to low Ψ(w )(-1.6 MPa) by maintaining longitudinal expansion in the apical 3 mm (region 1), whereas in the adjacent 4 mm (region 2) longitudinal expansion reaches a maximum in well-watered roots but is progressively inhibited at low Ψ(w). To identify mechanisms that determine these responses to low Ψ(w), transcript expression was profiled in these regions of water-stressed and well-watered roots. In addition, comparison between region 2 of water-stressed roots and the zone of growth deceleration in well-watered roots (region 3) distinguished stress-responsive genes in region 2 from those involved in cell maturation. RESULTS: Responses of gene expression to water stress in regions 1 and 2 were largely distinct. The largest functional categories of differentially expressed transcripts were reactive oxygen species and carbon metabolism in region 1, and membrane transport in region 2. Transcripts controlling sucrose hydrolysis distinguished well-watered and water-stressed states (invertase vs. sucrose synthase), and changes in expression of transcripts for starch synthesis indicated further alteration in carbon metabolism under water deficit. A role for inositols in the stress response was suggested, as was control of proline metabolism. Increased expression of transcripts for wall-loosening proteins in region 1, and for elements of ABA and ethylene signaling were also indicated in the response to water deficit. CONCLUSION: The analysis indicates that fundamentally different signaling and metabolic response mechanisms are involved in the response to water stress in different regions of the maize primary root elongation zone. BioMed Central 2008-04-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2364623/ /pubmed/18387193 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-8-32 Text en Copyright © 2008 Spollen et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Spollen, William G
Tao, Wenjing
Valliyodan, Babu
Chen, Kegui
Hejlek, Lindsey G
Kim, Jong-Joo
LeNoble, Mary E
Zhu, Jinming
Bohnert, Hans J
Henderson, David
Schachtman, Daniel P
Davis, Georgia E
Springer, Gordon K
Sharp, Robert E
Nguyen, Henry T
Spatial distribution of transcript changes in the maize primary root elongation zone at low water potential
title Spatial distribution of transcript changes in the maize primary root elongation zone at low water potential
title_full Spatial distribution of transcript changes in the maize primary root elongation zone at low water potential
title_fullStr Spatial distribution of transcript changes in the maize primary root elongation zone at low water potential
title_full_unstemmed Spatial distribution of transcript changes in the maize primary root elongation zone at low water potential
title_short Spatial distribution of transcript changes in the maize primary root elongation zone at low water potential
title_sort spatial distribution of transcript changes in the maize primary root elongation zone at low water potential
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2364623/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18387193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-8-32
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