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ath-miR164c influences plant responses to the combined stress of drought and bacterial infection by regulating proline metabolism

Authors :
Mahesh Patil
Muthappa Senthil-Kumar
Aarti Gupta
A. Qamar
Source :
Environmental and Experimental Botany. 172:103998
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Plants under combined stresses exhibit a prominent shift in molecular responses compared with plants exposed to the same stresses independently. Profiling responses to individual and combined stressors at the gene expression level have identified several genes with intersecting responses to these stressors. However, the upstream regulators at the intersection of plant responses to individual and combined stresses are not known. Here, using the transcriptome of Arabidopsis thaliana under individual and combined drought and Pseudomonas syringae infection, we identified several genes whose expression overlaps between individual and combined stresses. To study the key regulator of such an overlapping gene, we predicted that the expression of 1-Pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthase 1 (AtP5CS1) is regulated by ath-miR164c at post-transcriptional level. Our results from the stem-loop RT-PCR based expression analysis revealed significant downregulation of ath-miR164c in response to P. syringae infection under both well-irrigated (pathogen only) and drought stress (combined stress) conditions. Furthermore, an Arabidopsis loss-of-function mutant of the miRNA ath-miR164c exhibited resistance to pathogen infection under combined stress, unlike the wild-type plants, implicating the role of ath-miR164c in regulating plant immunity. AtP5CS1 gene expression and proline accumulation were enhanced in the ath-miR164c mutant plants relative to the wild-type plants, demonstrating that ath-miR164c regulates AtP5CS1 of the proline biosynthesis pathway, which was also validated by 5’RLM-RACE results. This miRNA-mediated modulation of AtP5CS1 gene expression under combined stress fills crucial gaps in identifying the key convergent players in the current understanding of plant stress responses.

Details

ISSN :
00988472
Volume :
172
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental and Experimental Botany
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5610015088bbcbfac9aaf5465d5f8358