4.7 Article

Rice Male Development under Drought Stress: Phenotypic Changes and Stage-Dependent Transcriptomic Reprogramming

Journal

MOLECULAR PLANT
Volume 6, Issue 5, Pages 1630-1645

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mp/sst067

Keywords

rice; floral development; drought stress; male fertility; transcriptome

Funding

  1. National Program on Key Basic Research Project (973 Program) [2012CB114300]
  2. Shanghai Key Basic Research Program [12JC1400500]
  3. National Transgenic Research Projects [2009ZX08009-071B, 2008ZX08009-003]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Rice yield is severely reduced by the water shortage condition during reproductive growth because effective grain numbers are largely determined by reproductive development. In this paper, the morphological and transcriptomic changes of rice floral development under water stress are reported.Drought affects rice reproduction and results in severe yield loss. The developmental defects and changes of gene regulation network in reproductive tissues under drought stress are largely unknown. In this study, rice plants subjected to reproductive stage drought stress were examined for floral development and transcriptomic changes. The results showed that male fertility was dramatically affected, with differing pollen viability in flowers of the same panicle due to aberrant anther development under water stress. Examination of local starch distribution revealed that starch accumulated abnormally in terms of position and abundance in anthers of water-stressed plants. Microarray analysis using florets of different sizes identified > 1000 drought-responsive genes, most of which were specifically regulated in only one or two particular sizes of florets, suggesting developmental stage-dependent responses to drought. Genes known to be involved in tapetum and/or microspore development, cell wall formation or expansion, and starch synthesis were found more frequently among the genes affected by drought than genome average, while meiosis and MADS-box genes were less frequently affected. In addition, pathways related to gibberellin acid signaling and abscisic acid catabolism were reprogrammed by drought. Our results strongly suggest interactions between reproductive development, phytohormone signaling, and carbohydrate metabolism in water-stressed plants.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available