Cargando…

Comparison between the Transcriptomes of ‘KDML105’ Rice and a Salt-Tolerant Chromosome Segment Substitution Line

‘KDML105’ rice, known as jasmine rice, is grown in northeast Thailand. The soil there has high salinity, which leads to low productivity. Chromosome substitution lines (CSSLs) with the ‘KDML105’ rice genetic background were evaluated for salt tolerance. CSSL18 showed the highest salt tolerance among...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Khrueasan, Nopphawitchayaphong, Chutimanukul, Panita, Plaimas, Kitiporn, Buaboocha, Teerapong, Siangliw, Meechai, Toojinda, Theerayut, Comai, Luca, Chadchawan, Supachitra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6827086/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31554292
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes10100742
_version_ 1783465243604680704
author Khrueasan, Nopphawitchayaphong
Chutimanukul, Panita
Plaimas, Kitiporn
Buaboocha, Teerapong
Siangliw, Meechai
Toojinda, Theerayut
Comai, Luca
Chadchawan, Supachitra
author_facet Khrueasan, Nopphawitchayaphong
Chutimanukul, Panita
Plaimas, Kitiporn
Buaboocha, Teerapong
Siangliw, Meechai
Toojinda, Theerayut
Comai, Luca
Chadchawan, Supachitra
author_sort Khrueasan, Nopphawitchayaphong
collection PubMed
description ‘KDML105’ rice, known as jasmine rice, is grown in northeast Thailand. The soil there has high salinity, which leads to low productivity. Chromosome substitution lines (CSSLs) with the ‘KDML105’ rice genetic background were evaluated for salt tolerance. CSSL18 showed the highest salt tolerance among the four lines tested. Based on a comparison between the CSSL18 and ‘KDML105’ transcriptomes, more than 27,000 genes were mapped onto the rice genome. Gene ontology enrichment of the significantly differentially expressed genes (DEGs) revealed that different mechanisms were involved in the salt stress responses between these lines. Biological process and molecular function enrichment analysis of the DEGs from both lines revealed differences in the two-component signal transduction system, involving LOC_Os04g23890, which encodes phototropin 2 (PHOT2), and LOC_Os07g44330, which encodes pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (PDK), the enzyme that inhibits pyruvate dehydrogenase in respiration. OsPHOT2 expression was maintained in CSSL18 under salt stress, whereas it was significantly decreased in ‘KDML105’, suggesting OsPHOT2 signaling may be involved in salt tolerance in CSSL18. PDK expression was induced only in ‘KDML105’. These results suggested respiration was more inhibited in ‘KDML105’ than in CSSL18, and this may contribute to the higher salt susceptibility of ‘KDML105’ rice. Moreover, the DEGs between ‘KDML105’ and CSSL18 revealed the enrichment in transcription factors and signaling proteins located on salt-tolerant quantitative trait loci (QTLs) on chromosome 1. Two of them, OsIRO2 and OsMSR2, showed the potential to be involved in salt stress response, especially, OsMSR2, whose orthologous genes in Arabidopsis had the potential role in photosynthesis adaptation under salt stress.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6827086
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-68270862019-11-18 Comparison between the Transcriptomes of ‘KDML105’ Rice and a Salt-Tolerant Chromosome Segment Substitution Line Khrueasan, Nopphawitchayaphong Chutimanukul, Panita Plaimas, Kitiporn Buaboocha, Teerapong Siangliw, Meechai Toojinda, Theerayut Comai, Luca Chadchawan, Supachitra Genes (Basel) Article ‘KDML105’ rice, known as jasmine rice, is grown in northeast Thailand. The soil there has high salinity, which leads to low productivity. Chromosome substitution lines (CSSLs) with the ‘KDML105’ rice genetic background were evaluated for salt tolerance. CSSL18 showed the highest salt tolerance among the four lines tested. Based on a comparison between the CSSL18 and ‘KDML105’ transcriptomes, more than 27,000 genes were mapped onto the rice genome. Gene ontology enrichment of the significantly differentially expressed genes (DEGs) revealed that different mechanisms were involved in the salt stress responses between these lines. Biological process and molecular function enrichment analysis of the DEGs from both lines revealed differences in the two-component signal transduction system, involving LOC_Os04g23890, which encodes phototropin 2 (PHOT2), and LOC_Os07g44330, which encodes pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (PDK), the enzyme that inhibits pyruvate dehydrogenase in respiration. OsPHOT2 expression was maintained in CSSL18 under salt stress, whereas it was significantly decreased in ‘KDML105’, suggesting OsPHOT2 signaling may be involved in salt tolerance in CSSL18. PDK expression was induced only in ‘KDML105’. These results suggested respiration was more inhibited in ‘KDML105’ than in CSSL18, and this may contribute to the higher salt susceptibility of ‘KDML105’ rice. Moreover, the DEGs between ‘KDML105’ and CSSL18 revealed the enrichment in transcription factors and signaling proteins located on salt-tolerant quantitative trait loci (QTLs) on chromosome 1. Two of them, OsIRO2 and OsMSR2, showed the potential to be involved in salt stress response, especially, OsMSR2, whose orthologous genes in Arabidopsis had the potential role in photosynthesis adaptation under salt stress. MDPI 2019-09-24 /pmc/articles/PMC6827086/ /pubmed/31554292 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes10100742 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Khrueasan, Nopphawitchayaphong
Chutimanukul, Panita
Plaimas, Kitiporn
Buaboocha, Teerapong
Siangliw, Meechai
Toojinda, Theerayut
Comai, Luca
Chadchawan, Supachitra
Comparison between the Transcriptomes of ‘KDML105’ Rice and a Salt-Tolerant Chromosome Segment Substitution Line
title Comparison between the Transcriptomes of ‘KDML105’ Rice and a Salt-Tolerant Chromosome Segment Substitution Line
title_full Comparison between the Transcriptomes of ‘KDML105’ Rice and a Salt-Tolerant Chromosome Segment Substitution Line
title_fullStr Comparison between the Transcriptomes of ‘KDML105’ Rice and a Salt-Tolerant Chromosome Segment Substitution Line
title_full_unstemmed Comparison between the Transcriptomes of ‘KDML105’ Rice and a Salt-Tolerant Chromosome Segment Substitution Line
title_short Comparison between the Transcriptomes of ‘KDML105’ Rice and a Salt-Tolerant Chromosome Segment Substitution Line
title_sort comparison between the transcriptomes of ‘kdml105’ rice and a salt-tolerant chromosome segment substitution line
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6827086/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31554292
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes10100742
work_keys_str_mv AT khrueasannopphawitchayaphong comparisonbetweenthetranscriptomesofkdml105riceandasalttolerantchromosomesegmentsubstitutionline
AT chutimanukulpanita comparisonbetweenthetranscriptomesofkdml105riceandasalttolerantchromosomesegmentsubstitutionline
AT plaimaskitiporn comparisonbetweenthetranscriptomesofkdml105riceandasalttolerantchromosomesegmentsubstitutionline
AT buaboochateerapong comparisonbetweenthetranscriptomesofkdml105riceandasalttolerantchromosomesegmentsubstitutionline
AT siangliwmeechai comparisonbetweenthetranscriptomesofkdml105riceandasalttolerantchromosomesegmentsubstitutionline
AT toojindatheerayut comparisonbetweenthetranscriptomesofkdml105riceandasalttolerantchromosomesegmentsubstitutionline
AT comailuca comparisonbetweenthetranscriptomesofkdml105riceandasalttolerantchromosomesegmentsubstitutionline
AT chadchawansupachitra comparisonbetweenthetranscriptomesofkdml105riceandasalttolerantchromosomesegmentsubstitutionline