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ZmPHR1 contributes to drought resistance by modulating phosphate homeostasis in maize.

Meng-Zhi TianHai-Feng WangYan TianJie HaoHui-Ling GuoLi-Mei ChenYa-Kang WeiShi-Hao ZhanHong-Tao YuYi-Fang Chen
Published in: Plant biotechnology journal (2024)
As an essential macronutrient, phosphorus (P) is often a limiting nutrient because of its low availability and mobility in soils. Drought is a major environmental stress that reduces crop yield. How plants balance and combine P-starvation responses (PSRs) and drought resistance is unclear. In this study, we identified the transcription factor ZmPHR1 as a major regulator of PSRs that modulates phosphate (Pi) signaling and homeostasis. We found that maize zmphr1 mutants had reduced P concentration and were sensitive to Pi starvation, whereas ZmPHR1-OE lines displayed elevated Pi concentration and yields. In addition, 57% of PSR genes and nearly 70% of ZmPHR1-regulated PSR genes in leaves were transcriptionally responsive to drought. Under moderate and early drought conditions, the Pi concentration of maize decreased, and PSR genes were up-regulated before drought-responsive genes. The ZmPHR1-OE lines exhibited drought-resistant phenotypes and reduced stomatal apertures, whereas the opposite was true of the zmphr1 mutants. ZmPT7-OE lines and zmspx3 mutants, which had elevated Pi concentration, also exhibited drought resistance, but zmpt7 mutants were sensitive to drought. Our results suggest that ZmPHR1 plays a central role in integrating Pi and drought signals and that Pi homeostasis improves the ability of maize to combat drought.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • heat stress
  • plant growth
  • transcription factor
  • genome wide
  • genome wide identification
  • risk assessment
  • cancer therapy
  • gene expression
  • drug delivery
  • dna binding