4.7 Article

OsBTBZ1 Confers Salt Stress Tolerance in Arabidopsis thaliana

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241914483

Keywords

abiotic stress; abscisic acid; BTB domain; BTBZ; salt stress; tolerance

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Rice, one of the most important commodities and a primary food source worldwide, can be affected by adverse environmental factors. In this study, a salt-tolerant chromosome segment substitution line of rice was identified and its transcriptomic data was compared under normal and salt stress conditions. Several BTB genes were found to be differentially expressed under salt stress, with one gene being differentially expressed at the seedling stage and others at the booting stage. Further analysis revealed that OsBTBZ1 plays an important role in transcriptional regulation and is closely associated with other abiotic stress-related proteins. Additionally, OsBTBZ1 was found to function in ABA-dependent pathways for salt tolerance.
Rice (Oryza sativa L.), one of the most important commodities and a primary food source worldwide, can be affected by adverse environmental factors. The chromosome segment substitution line 16 (CSSL16) of rice is considered salt-tolerant. A comparison of the transcriptomic data of the CSSL16 line under normal and salt stress conditions revealed 511 differentially expressed sequence (DEseq) genes at the seedling stage, 520 DEseq genes in the secondary leaves, and 584 DEseq genes in the flag leaves at the booting stage. Four BTB genes, OsBTBZ1, OsBTBZ2, OsBTBN3, and OsBTBN7, were differentially expressed under salt stress. Interestingly, only OsBTBZ1 was differentially expressed at the seedling stage, whereas the other genes were differentially expressed at the booting stage. Based on the STRING database, OsBTBZ1 was more closely associated with other abiotic stress-related proteins than other BTB genes. The highest expression of OsBTBZ1 was observed in the sheaths of young leaves. The OsBTBZ1-GFP fusion protein was localized to the nucleus, supporting the hypothesis of a transcriptionally regulatory role for this protein. The bt3 Arabidopsis mutant line exhibited susceptibility to NaCl and abscisic acid (ABA) but not to mannitol. NaCl and ABA decreased the germination rate and growth of the mutant lines. Moreover, the ectopic expression of OsBTBZ1 rescued the phenotypes of the bt3 mutant line and enhanced the growth of wild-type Arabidopsis under stress conditions. These results suggest that OsBTBZ1 is a salt-tolerant gene functioning in ABA-dependent pathways.

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