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Progress and Prospects of the Molecular Basis of Soybean Cold Tolerance

Cold stress is a major factor influencing the geographical distribution of soybean growth and causes immense losses in productivity. Understanding the molecular mechanisms that the soybean has undergone to survive cold temperatures will have immense value in improving soybean cold tolerance. This re...

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Autores principales: Tsegaw, Mesfin, Zegeye, Workie Anley, Jiang, Bingjun, Sun, Shi, Yuan, Shan, Han, Tianfu, Wu, Tingting
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9919458/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36771543
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12030459
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author Tsegaw, Mesfin
Zegeye, Workie Anley
Jiang, Bingjun
Sun, Shi
Yuan, Shan
Han, Tianfu
Wu, Tingting
author_facet Tsegaw, Mesfin
Zegeye, Workie Anley
Jiang, Bingjun
Sun, Shi
Yuan, Shan
Han, Tianfu
Wu, Tingting
author_sort Tsegaw, Mesfin
collection PubMed
description Cold stress is a major factor influencing the geographical distribution of soybean growth and causes immense losses in productivity. Understanding the molecular mechanisms that the soybean has undergone to survive cold temperatures will have immense value in improving soybean cold tolerance. This review focuses on the molecular mechanisms involved in soybean response to cold. We summarized the recent studies on soybean cold-tolerant quantitative trait loci (QTLs), transcription factors, associated cold-regulated (COR) genes, and the regulatory pathways in response to cold stress. Cold-tolerant QTLs were found to be overlapped with the genomic region of maturity loci of E1, E3, E4, pubescence color locus of T, stem growth habit gene locus of Dt1, and leaf shape locus of Ln, indicating that pleiotropic loci may control multiple traits, including cold tolerance. The C-repeat responsive element binding factors (CBFs) are evolutionarily conserved across species. The expression of most GmDREB1s was upregulated by cold stress and overexpression of GmDREB1B;1 in soybean protoplast, and transgenic Arabidopsis plants can increase the expression of genes with the DRE core motif in their promoter regions under cold stress. Other soybean cold-responsive regulators, such as GmMYBJ1, GmNEK1, GmZF1, GmbZIP, GmTCF1a, SCOF-1 and so on, enhance cold tolerance by regulating the expression of COR genes in transgenic Arabidopsis. CBF-dependent and CBF-independent pathways are cross-talking and work together to activate cold stress gene expression. Even though it requires further dissection for precise understanding, the function of soybean cold-responsive transcription factors and associated COR genes studied in Arabidopsis shed light on the molecular mechanism of cold responses in soybeans and other crops. Furthermore, the findings may also provide practical applications for breeding cold-tolerant soybean varieties in high-latitude and high-altitude regions.
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spelling pubmed-99194582023-02-12 Progress and Prospects of the Molecular Basis of Soybean Cold Tolerance Tsegaw, Mesfin Zegeye, Workie Anley Jiang, Bingjun Sun, Shi Yuan, Shan Han, Tianfu Wu, Tingting Plants (Basel) Review Cold stress is a major factor influencing the geographical distribution of soybean growth and causes immense losses in productivity. Understanding the molecular mechanisms that the soybean has undergone to survive cold temperatures will have immense value in improving soybean cold tolerance. This review focuses on the molecular mechanisms involved in soybean response to cold. We summarized the recent studies on soybean cold-tolerant quantitative trait loci (QTLs), transcription factors, associated cold-regulated (COR) genes, and the regulatory pathways in response to cold stress. Cold-tolerant QTLs were found to be overlapped with the genomic region of maturity loci of E1, E3, E4, pubescence color locus of T, stem growth habit gene locus of Dt1, and leaf shape locus of Ln, indicating that pleiotropic loci may control multiple traits, including cold tolerance. The C-repeat responsive element binding factors (CBFs) are evolutionarily conserved across species. The expression of most GmDREB1s was upregulated by cold stress and overexpression of GmDREB1B;1 in soybean protoplast, and transgenic Arabidopsis plants can increase the expression of genes with the DRE core motif in their promoter regions under cold stress. Other soybean cold-responsive regulators, such as GmMYBJ1, GmNEK1, GmZF1, GmbZIP, GmTCF1a, SCOF-1 and so on, enhance cold tolerance by regulating the expression of COR genes in transgenic Arabidopsis. CBF-dependent and CBF-independent pathways are cross-talking and work together to activate cold stress gene expression. Even though it requires further dissection for precise understanding, the function of soybean cold-responsive transcription factors and associated COR genes studied in Arabidopsis shed light on the molecular mechanism of cold responses in soybeans and other crops. Furthermore, the findings may also provide practical applications for breeding cold-tolerant soybean varieties in high-latitude and high-altitude regions. MDPI 2023-01-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9919458/ /pubmed/36771543 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12030459 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Tsegaw, Mesfin
Zegeye, Workie Anley
Jiang, Bingjun
Sun, Shi
Yuan, Shan
Han, Tianfu
Wu, Tingting
Progress and Prospects of the Molecular Basis of Soybean Cold Tolerance
title Progress and Prospects of the Molecular Basis of Soybean Cold Tolerance
title_full Progress and Prospects of the Molecular Basis of Soybean Cold Tolerance
title_fullStr Progress and Prospects of the Molecular Basis of Soybean Cold Tolerance
title_full_unstemmed Progress and Prospects of the Molecular Basis of Soybean Cold Tolerance
title_short Progress and Prospects of the Molecular Basis of Soybean Cold Tolerance
title_sort progress and prospects of the molecular basis of soybean cold tolerance
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9919458/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36771543
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12030459
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