4.5 Article

Regulation of gene expression by chromosome 5A during cold hardening in wheat

Journal

MOLECULAR GENETICS AND GENOMICS
Volume 283, Issue 4, Pages 351-363

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00438-010-0520-0

Keywords

Wheat chromosome 5A; Freezing tolerance; Cold acclimation; Comparative transcription profiling

Funding

  1. German-Hungarian bilateral cooperation PlantResource'' [WTZ HUN 02/001]
  2. state of Saxony-Anhalt (German-Hungarian Distributed Project Group PlantResource FKZ) [3593A/04055T]
  3. Hungarian Scientific Research Fund
  4. National Office for Research and Technology [NKTH-OTKA K 67906, K 68894, NKFP OM-00018/04, subtask 3/1, NKTH NAP-BIO-06-OMFB-00515/2007]
  5. European Union [AGRISAFE 203288-EU-FP7-REG-POT 2007-1]

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Cold hardening is necessary to achieve the genetically determined maximum freezing tolerance and to reduce yield losses in winter cereals. The aim of the present study was to determine a set of genes with an important role in this process, by comparing of chromosome 5A substitution lines with different levels of freezing tolerance, since chromosome 5A is a major regulator of this trait. During 21 days of treatment at 2A degrees C, 303 genes were up-regulated, while 222 were down-regulated at most sampling points, and 156 at around half of them (out of the 10,297 unigenes studied). The freezing-tolerant substitution line exhibited 1.5 times as many differentially expressed genes than the sensitive one. The transcription of 78 genes (39 up-regulated) proved to be chromosome 5A-dependent. These genes encoded proteins involved in transcriptional regulation, defence processes and carbohydrate metabolism. Three of the chromosome 5A-related genes, coding for a cold-responsive, a Ca-binding and an embryo and meristem-related protein, were genetically mapped and characterized in further detail. The present experimental system was appropriate for the selection of chromosome 5A-related genes involved in short- and long-term cold acclimation in wheat. By modifying the expression of these genes it may be possible to improve freezing tolerance.

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