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OsASR5enhances drought tolerance through a stomatal closure pathway associated with ABA and H2O2signalling in rice

Authors :
Minghui Zhang
Jihong Jiang
Haiyan Xiong
Jinjie Li
Xiao Guo
Yan Zhao
Zhanying Zhang
Shao Yujie
Zichao Li
Conghui Jiang
Zhigang Yin
Jauhar Ali
Yang Li
Gynheung An
Hongliang Zhang
Nam-Chon Paek
Zhujia Ye
Source :
Plant Biotechnology Journal
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Wiley, 2016.

Abstract

Summary Drought is one of the major abiotic stresses that directly implicate plant growth and crop productivity. Although many genes in response to drought stress have been identified, genetic improvement to drought resistance especially in food crops is showing relatively slow progress worldwide. Here, we reported the isolation of abscisic acid, stress and ripening (ASR) genes from upland rice variety, IRAT109 (Oryza sativa L. ssp. japonica), and demonstrated that overexpression of OsASR5 enhanced osmotic tolerance in Escherichia coli and drought tolerance in Arabidopsis and rice by regulating leaf water status under drought stress conditions. Moreover, overexpression of OsASR5 in rice increased endogenous ABA level and showed hypersensitive to exogenous ABA treatment at both germination and postgermination stages. The production of H2O2, a second messenger for the induction of stomatal closure in response to ABA, was activated in overexpression plants under drought stress conditions, consequently, increased stomatal closure and decreased stomatal conductance. In contrast, the loss‐of‐function mutant, osasr5, showed sensitivity to drought stress with lower relative water content under drought stress conditions. Further studies demonstrated that OsASR5 functioned as chaperone‐like protein and interacted with stress‐related HSP40 and 2OG‐Fe (II) oxygenase domain containing proteins in yeast and plants. Taken together, we suggest that OsASR5 plays multiple roles in response to drought stress by regulating ABA biosynthesis, promoting stomatal closure, as well as acting as chaperone‐like protein that possibly prevents drought stress‐related proteins from inactivation.

Details

ISSN :
14677644
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Biotechnology Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e72cda5e88a2631e575ff66354a8d5af
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/pbi.12601