4.4 Article

Comparative ABA-Responsive Transcriptome in Soybean Cultivars Submitted to Different Levels of Drought

Journal

PLANT MOLECULAR BIOLOGY REPORTER
Volume 41, Issue 2, Pages 260-276

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11105-022-01364-4

Keywords

Glycine max; Abscisic acid; ABRE motif; Water deficit; RNA-Seq

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This study identified ABA-responsive genes and enriched pathways related to ABA in soybeans, and these findings are significant for the development of drought-tolerant soybean varieties.
Background The drought condition is responsible for considerable losses in soybean production, which in turn may result in billionaire losses. After drought perception, plants activate a cascade of protecting genes against water deficit (WD), many of which are responsive to abscisic acid, the most important phytohormone to plants' adaptation. This work aimed to recover abscisic acid (ABA)-responsive differentially expressed genes (DEG) from an RNA-Seq, carried out from leaves and roots of drought-sensitive (BR16) and tolerant (Embrapa 48) soybean cultivars under mild (MiWD), moderate (MoWD), and severe (SWD) water-deficit treatments. Enriched ABA-responsive pathways important to drought tolerance in soybean were also identified. Results In drought-sensitive and tolerant soybean cultivars, approximately 75% of genes were identified as ABA-responsive by containing more than two ABRE (ABA-responsive elements) in the promoter region. Most of these genes were positively regulated. Roots were the tissue with more ABA-responsive genes and pathways triggered in response to WD in both cultivars, although, on the tolerant cultivar, these pathways were higher expressed. The most important enriched ABA pathways observed in the roots of both cultivars were involved in sugar and sulfur amino acid biosynthesis, osmoregulation, and crosstalk among ABA and ethylene, jasmonate, auxin, and cytokinin. Other pathways enriched were involved in phytoalexin production, ROS homeostasis, and membrane stability by glycerolipid and glycerophospholipid production. ABA-responsive genes were also ordered based on their expression profile in tissue and cultivar, and nine confidence groups could be observed. More than 80% of these clustered genes showed the same regulation profile under MiWd, MoWD, and SWD treatments. Activation of ABA biosynthesis under water deficit was validated by RT-qPCR by increasing the expression level of NCED3, an important enzyme in this pathway, and GOLS, a known ABA-responsive gene. Conclusions A robust catalog of ABA-responsive genes was made available in this work. Considering ABA's role in drought-response mechanisms, the genes in the groups pointed out in this study would be reliable candidates to be used in strategies to develop soybean lines more tolerant to drought. This paper, presented for the first time, ABA-responsive genes and ABA-enriched pathways in contrasting soybean cultivars for drought tolerance.

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