Yinqiang Zi, Mengjie Zhang, Xiuyao Yang, Ke Zhao, Tuo Yin, Ke Wen, Xulin Li, Xiaozhen Liu, Hanyao Zhang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Salt stress is one of the primary environmental stresses limiting plant growth and production and adversely affecting the growth, development, yield, and fruit quality of Citrus sinensis. bHLH (basic helix-loop-helix) genes are involved in many bioregulatory processes in plants, including growth and development, phytohormone signaling, defense responses, and biosynthesis of specific metabolites. In this study, by bioinformatics methods, 120 CsbHLHgenes were identified, and phylogenetic analysis classified them into 18 subfamilies that were unevenly distributed on nine chromosomes. The cis-acting elements of the CsbHLH genes were mainly hormone-related cis-acting elements. Seventeen CsbHLH genes exhibited significant differences in expression under salt stress. Six CsbHLH genes with significant differences in expression were randomly selected for quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) validation. The qRT-PCR results showed a strong correlation with the transcriptome data. Phytohormones such as jasmonic acid (JA) are essential for biotic and abiotic stress responses in plants, and CsbHLH55 and CsbHLH87 are considered candidate target genes for sweet orange MYC2 transcription factors involved in the JA signaling pathway. These genes are the main downstream effectors in the JA signaling pathway and can be activated to participate in the JA signaling pathway. Activation of the JA signaling pathway inhibits the production of reactive oxygen species and improves the salt tolerance of sweet orange plants. The CsbHLH55 and CsbHLH87 genes could be candidate genes for breeding new transgenic salt-resistant varieties of sweet orange.
期刊介绍:
The Plant Genome publishes original research investigating all aspects of plant genomics. Technical breakthroughs reporting improvements in the efficiency and speed of acquiring and interpreting plant genomics data are welcome. The editorial board gives preference to novel reports that use innovative genomic applications that advance our understanding of plant biology that may have applications to crop improvement. The journal also publishes invited review articles and perspectives that offer insight and commentary on recent advances in genomics and their potential for agronomic improvement.