4.3 Article

In vivo assessment of salinity stress tolerance in transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing Solanum tuberosum D200 gene

Journal

BIOLOGIA PLANTARUM
Volume 66, Issue -, Pages 123-131

Publisher

ACAD SCIENCES CZECH REPUBLIC, INST EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
DOI: 10.32615/bp.2021.072

Keywords

Arabidopsis; chlorophyll; fluorescence; salinity; transgenic plants

Categories

Funding

  1. Khalifa Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, United Arab Emirates University [31R110, 31R219]

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This study investigated the tolerance of transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing a potato D200 gene to salinity stress. The D200 plants showed increased chlorophyll content, improved stomatal conductance, reduced electrolyte leakage, lower accumulation of malondialdehyde, and higher proline content compared to wild type plants under salt stress. Gene expression analysis revealed that D200 plants had higher mRNA transcript levels of three major antioxidant enzymes, and fluorescence kinetics analysis showed that the D200 plants were more efficient in primary photochemistry of photosystem II. These findings suggest that the D200 gene could be a potential candidate for developing stress-resilient crops.
Transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing a potato D200 gene encoding a hypothetical protein were subjected to salinity stress and assessed for their tolerance. The D200 Arabidopsis lines exhibited increased chlorophyll content, improved stomatal conductance, less electrolyte leakage, lower accumulation of malondialdehyde (MDA), and a higher amount of proline compared to the wild type (WT) plants under salinity stress. The gene expression analysis revealed that D200 plants accumulated a significantly higher amount of mRNA transcripts of genes encoding three major antioxidant enzymes ascorbate peroxidase (APX), catalase (CAT), and superoxide dismutase (SOD). Chlorophyll a fluorescence kinetics analyses showed the D200 plants were more efficient in terms of primary photochemistry of photosystem II and performance indices. Furthermore, the quantum yields and efficiencies that represent the critical steps of photosynthetic light reactions were analyzed and it was found that D200 plants were photosynthetically more active than the WT plants under salt stress conditions. Overall, these findings suggest that the D200 gene is a potential candidate gene for developing stress-resilient crops in future.

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