Acetic Acid Treatment Enhances the Drought Avoidance in Cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz)
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ABSTRACT: External application of acetic acid has been recently reported to enhance the survival to drought in plants such as Arabidopsis, rapeseed, maize, rice and wheat, but the effects of acetic acid application on increased drought tolerance in woody plants such as a tropical crop “cassava” remain elusive. A molecular understanding of acetic acid-induced drought avoidance in cassava will contribute to the development of technology that can be used to enhance drought tolerance without resorting to transgenic technology or advancements in cassava cultivation. In the present study, morphological, physiological and molecular responses to drought were analyzed in cassava after the treatment with acetic acid. Results indicated that the acetic acid-treated cassava plants had a higher level of drought avoidance than water-treated, control plants. Specifically, higher leaf relative water content, and chlorophyll and carotenoid levels were observed as soils dried out during the drought treatment. Leaf temperatures in acetic acid-treated cassava plants were higher relative to leaves on plants pretreated with water and the increase of ABA content was observed in leaves of acetic acid-treated plants, suggesting that stomatal conductance and the transpiration rate in leaves of acetic acid-treated plants decreased to maintain relative water contents and avoid drought. Transcriptome analysis revealed that the acetic acid treatment increased the expression of ABA signaling-related genes, such as OPEN STOMATA 1 (OST1) and protein phosphatase 2C; as well as drought response and tolerance-related genes, such as outer membrane tryptophan-rich sensory protein (TSPO), and heat shock proteins. Collectively, the external application of acetic acid enhances drought avoidance in cassava through the upregulation of ABA signaling pathway genes and several stress response- and tolerance-related genes. These data support the idea that adjustments of the acetic acid application to plants is useful to enhance drought tolerance in order to minimize the growth inhibition in the agricultural field.
Project description:The external application of ethanol has been reported to enhance salinity, drought and heat stress tolerance in various plant species (Nguyen et al. 2017 ; Bashir et al. in prep.; Matsui et al. in prep). However, the effects of ethanol application on increased drought tolerance in cassava, an important tropical starch crop used for food security and industrial application by a billion people world-wide, remain unknown. In the present study, morphological, physiological, and molecular responses to drought were analyzed in cassava after the treatment with ethanol. The present study showed that the ethanol treatment increased drought avoidance in cassava than the water treatment. Ethanol treatment induced stomatal closure, resulting in the increase of leaf temperature. The decrease in water content of the leaves during drought stress treatment was reduced in ethanol-treated plants compared with control plants. Transcriptome analysis revealed that the expression of drought stress response-related genes and ABA response-related genes was lower in ethanol-treated plants compared with control plants on 12 days after drought treatment.
Project description:To understand the role of acetic acids in drought tolerance, we have employed transcriptional profiling of plants treated with (or without) acetic acid and subsequent drought treatments. Agilent-021169 Arabidopsis 4 Oligo Microarray (V4) were used. Arabidopsis Col-0 were grown in soil for 2 weeks (16 hours light / 8 hours dark). 10mM acetic acid was supplied for 9 days. For drought-treated samples, the plants were subjected to drought by withholding water supply for indicated days. Then total RNA was prepared from the aboveground tissue and used for the microarray hybridization. Three replicative hybridization experiments for each array were carried out using the independent biological samples.
Project description:To understand the role of acetic acids in drought tolerance, we have employed transcriptional profiling of plants treated with (or without) acetic acid and subsequent drought treatments. Agilent-021169 Arabidopsis 4 Oligo Microarray (V4) were used.
Project description:This study utilized next generation sequencing technology (RNA-Seq) to examine the transcriptome of sorghum plants challenged with osmotic stress and exogenous abscisic acid (ABA) to elucidate those genes and gene networks that contribute to sorghum's tolerance to water-limiting environments with a long-term aim of developing strategies to improve plant productivity under drought.
Project description:Transgenic Arabidopsis plants with constitutively low inositol (1,4,5) triphosphate exhibit an increased tolerance to water stress by an ABA-independent pathway The phosphoinositide pathway and inositol (1,4,5) trisphopsphate (InsP3) are implicated in plant responses to stress. In order to manipulate the pathway and determine the downstream consequences of altered InsP3-mediated signaling, we generated transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing the mammalian type I inositol polyphosphate 5-phosphatase, an enzyme that specifically hydrolyzes the soluble inositol phosphates and terminates the signal. Transgenic plants have no morphological differences compared to wild type; however, rapid transient Ca2+ responses to a cold or salt stimulus are reduced by ~ 30%. To further understand the role of InsP3-mediated signaling in plant stress responses we focused on drought stress. Surprisingly, the InsP 5-ptase plants lose less water and exhibited an increased tolerance to drought. Stomatal bioassays showed that transgenic guard cells are less responsive to the inhibition of opening by ABA but show an increased sensitivity to ABA-induced closure. The onset of the drought stress is delayed in the transgenic plants and ABA levels did not increase as much as in the wild type. Transcript profiling has revealed that DREB2A and a subset of DREB2A regulated genes are basally up regulated in the InsP 5-ptase plants. These results indicate that the drought tolerance of the InsP 5-ptase plants is mediated in part via an ABA-independent pathway. The constitutive dampening of the InsP3 signal in this system has uncovered novel regulation and cross talk between signaling pathways. Keywords: drought stress, expression study
Project description:Plants acclimate to drought and water stress through diverse physiological responses, primarily mediated by the hormone abscisic acid (ABA). The closure of stomatal pores on aerial surfaces of plants is one of the rapid responses mediated by ABA to reduce transpirational water loss because plants lose the majority of their water through stomatal pores. Stomatal guard cells have been an important cellular system for studying ABA signaling. The dynamic changes in the transcriptome of stomatal guard cells in response to ABA have been investigated in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. In this study, we analyzed the dynamics of ABA-regulated transcriptomes in stomatal guard cells of Brassica napus.
2025-03-08 | GSE254116 | GEO
Project description:exogenous application of acetic acid enhances apple drought tolerance
Project description:Water availability is the biggest single limitation on plant productivity worldwide. In Arabidopsis, adjustments to drought stress, involving changes in metabolism and gene expression drive increased drought tolerance and initiate diverse drought avoidance and escape responses. To address regulatory processes that integrate these complex responses we hypothesised that we needed to identify genes that govern early responses to drought. To this end, we produced a high-resolution time series transcriptomics dataset, coupled with detailed physiological and metabolic analyses of plants subjected to a slow transition from well-watered to the onset of drought conditions. 1825 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified which showed no significant enrichment in gene ontology terms associated with dehydration responses and abscisic acid (ABA) regulation, confirming that the gene expression time series had targeted events prior to severe drought stress. Initial changes in gene expression coincided with a drop in carbon assimilation, not the later increase in foliar ABA content. Thus the early physiological and gene expression responses to drought were not driven by changes in leaf ABA content. In order to identify gene regulatory networks (GRNs) linked to early events, we used Bayesian network modelling of differentially expressed transcription factor (TF) genes. This approach identified AGAMOUS-LIKE 22 as key hub gene in a TF GRN. AGL22 is involved in the transition from vegetative state to flowering. Loss of AGL22 expression affected flowering time and drying rate providing a link between early changes in metabolism and the subsequent initiation of developmental responses to stress that govern plant productivity.
Project description:Abscisic acid (ABA)-, stress-, and ripening-induced (ASR) proteins are involved in abiotic stress responses. However, the exact molecular mechanism underlying their function remains unclear. Notably, the direct targets of ASRs that confer drought stress tolerance have not yet been identified.In this study, we report that MaASR expression was induced by drought stress and MaASR overexpression in Arabidopsis strongly enhanced drought stress tolerance. Physiological analyses indicated that transgenic lines had higher survival rates, germination rates and proline content, and lower water loss rates (WLR) and malondialdehyde (MDA) content. MaASR-overexpressing lines also showed smaller leaves and reduced sensitivity to ABA. Further, microarray and chromatin immunoprecipitation-based sequencing (ChIP-seq) analysis revealed that MaASR participates in regulating photosynthesis, respiration, carbohydrate and phytohormone metabolism and signal transduction to confer plants with enhanced drought stress tolerance. Direct interactions of MaASR with promoters for the hexose transporter and Rho GTPase-activating protein (RhoGAP) genes were confirmed by electrophoresis mobility shift array (EMSA) analysis. Our results indicate that MaASR acts as a crucial regulator of photosynthesis, respiration, carbohydrate and phytohormone metabolism and signal transduction to mediate drought stress tolerance.