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Deciphering physiological and transcriptional mechanisms of maize seed germination.

Authors :
Jie, Yaqi
Wang, Wei
Wu, Zishan
Ren, Zhaobin
Li, Lu
Zhou, Yuyi
Zhang, Mingcai
Li, Zhaohu
Yi, Fei
Duan, Liusheng
Source :
Plant Molecular Biology; Oct2024, Vol. 114 Issue 5, p1-16, 16p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Maize is a valuable raw material for feed and food production. Healthy seed germination is important for improving the yield and quality of maize. Seed aging occurs relatively fast in crops and it is a process that delays germination as well as reduces its rate and even causes total loss of seed viability. However, the physiological and transcriptional mechanisms that regulate maize seeds, especially aging seed germination remain unclear. Coronatine (COR) which is a phytotoxin produced by Pseudomonas syringae and a new type of plant growth regulator can effectively regulate plant growth and development, and regulate seed germination. In this study, the physiological and transcriptomic mechanisms of COR-induced maize seed germination under different aging degrees were analyzed. The results showed that 0.001–0.01 μmol/L COR could promote the germination of aging maize seed and the growth of primary roots and shoots. COR treatment increased the content of gibberellins (GA<subscript>3</subscript>) and decreased the content of abscisic acid (ABA) in B73 seeds before germination. The result of RNA-seq analysis showed 497 differentially expressed genes in COR treatment compared with the control. Three genes associated with GA biosynthesis (ZmCPPS2, ZmD3, and ZmGA2ox2), and two genes associated with GA signaling transduction (ZmGID1 and ZmBHLH158) were up-regulated. Three genes negatively regulating GA signaling transduction (ZmGRAS48, ZmGRAS54, and Zm00001d033369) and two genes involved in ABA biosynthesis (ZmVP14 and ZmPCO14472) were down-regulated. The physiological test results also showed that the effects of GA and ABA on seed germination were similar to those of high and low-concentration COR, respectively, which indicated that the effect of COR on seed germination may be carried out through GA and ABA pathways. In addition, GO and KEGG analysis suggested that COR is also highly involved in antioxidant enzyme systems and secondary metabolite synthesis to regulate maize seed germination processes. These findings provide a valuable reference for further research on the mechanisms of maize seed germination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01674412
Volume :
114
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Plant Molecular Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179385967
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11103-024-01486-1