info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Transcriptomic response of durum wheat to cold stress at reproductive stage
Fecha
2019-02-23Registro en:
Díaz, Marina Lucía; Soresi, Daniela Soledad; Basualdo, Jessica; Cuppari, Selva Yanet; Carrera, Alicia Delia; Transcriptomic response of durum wheat to cold stress at reproductive stage; Springer; Molecular Biology Reports; 46; 23-2-2019; 2427-2445
0301-4851
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Díaz, Marina Lucía
Soresi, Daniela Soledad
Basualdo, Jessica
Cuppari, Selva Yanet
Carrera, Alicia Delia
Resumen
Understanding the genetic basis of cold tolerance is a key step towards obtaining new and improved crop varieties. Current geographical distribution of durum wheat in Argentina exposes the plants to frost damage when spikes have already emerged. Biochemical pathways involved in cold tolerance are known to be early activated at above freezing temperatures. In this study we reported the transcriptome of CBW0101 spring durum wheat by merging data from untreated control and cold (5 °C) treated plant samples at reproductive stage. A total of 128,804 unigenes were predicted. Near 62% of the unigenes were annotated in at least one database. In total 876 unigenes were differentially expressed (DEGs), 562 were up-regulated and 314 down-regulated in treated samples. DEGs are involved in many critical processes including, photosynthetic activity, lipid and carbohydrate synthesis and accumulation of amino acids and seed proteins. Twenty-eight transcription factors (TFs) belonging to 14 families resulted differentially expressed from which eight families comprised of only TFs induced by cold. We also found 31 differentially expressed Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), most of them up-regulated in treated plants. Two of these lncRNAs could operate via microRNAs (miRNAs) target mimic. Our results suggest a reprogramming of expression patterns in CBW0101 that affects a number of genes that is closer to the number reported in winter genotypes. These observations could partially explain its moderate tolerance (low proportion of frost-damaged spikes) when exposed to freezing days in the field.