4.7 Article

Transcription Factor ChbZIP1 from Alkaliphilic Microalgae Chlorella sp. BLD Enhancing Alkaline Tolerance in Transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22052387

Keywords

alkaliphilic microalgae; ChbZIP1; Arabidopsis; detoxification pathway; alkaline tolerance

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2020YFA0907700]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai [20ZR1426600]

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Saline-alkali soil poses a significant environmental challenge for crop productivity, and cultivating new stress-tolerant plants through genetic engineering is an effective approach. Research has identified the bZIP transcription factor ChbZIP1 as playing a key role in plant response to alkaline stress, potentially mediating plant adaptation through the active oxygen detoxification pathway. This discovery suggests that ChbZIP1 could contribute to enhancing plants' tolerance to alkali stress.
Saline-alkali soil has become an important environmental problem for crop productivity. One of the most effective approaches is to cultivate new stress-tolerant plants through genetic engineering. Through RNA-seq analysis and RT-PCR validation, a novel bZIP transcription factor ChbZIP1, which is significantly upregulated at alkali conditions, was obtained from alkaliphilic microalgae Chlorella sp. BLD. Overexpression of ChbZIP1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Arabidopsis increased their alkali resistance, indicating ChbZIP1 may play important roles in alkali stress response. Through subcellular localization and transcriptional activation activity analyses, we found that ChbZIP1 is a nuclear-localized bZIP TF with transactivation activity to bind with the motif of G-box 2 (TGACGT). Functional analysis found that genes such as GPX1, DOX1, CAT2, and EMB, which contained G-box 2 and were associated with oxidative stress, were significantly upregulated in Arabidopsis with ChbZIP1 overexpression. The antioxidant ability was also enhanced in transgenic Arabidopsis. These results indicate that ChbZIP1 might mediate plant adaptation to alkali stress through the active oxygen detoxification pathway. Thus, ChbZIP1 may contribute to genetically improving plants' tolerance to alkali stress.

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