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Genome-Wide Characterization and Expression Profiling of ABA Biosynthesis Genes in a Desert Moss Syntrichia caninervis .

Xiujin LiuXiaoshuang LiHonglan YangRuirui YangDaoyuan Zhang
Published in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Syntrichia caninervis can survive under 80-90% protoplasmic water losses, and it is a model plant in desiccation tolerance research. A previous study has revealed that S. caninervis would accumulate ABA under dehydration stress, while the ABA biosynthesis genes in S. caninervis are still unknown. This study identified one ScABA1 , two ScABA4s , five ScNCEDs , twenty-nine ScABA2s , one ScABA3 , and four ScAAOs genes, indicating that the ABA biosynthesis genes were complete in S. caninervis . Gene location analysis showed that the ABA biosynthesis genes were evenly distributed in chromosomes but were not allocated to sex chromosomes. Collinear analysis revealed that ScABA1 , ScNCED , and ScABA2 had homologous genes in Physcomitrella patens . RT-qPCR detection found that all of the ABA biosynthesis genes responded to abiotic stress; it further indicated that ABA plays an important role in S. caninervis . Moreover, the ABA biosynthesis genes in 19 representative plants were compared to study their phylogenetic and conserved motifs; the results suggested that the ABA biosynthesis genes were closely associated with plant taxa, but these genes had the same conserved domain in each plant. In contrast, there is a huge variation in the exon number between different plant taxa; it revealed that ABA biosynthesis gene structures are closely related to plant taxa. Above all, this study provides strong evidence demonstrating that ABA biosynthesis genes were conserved in the plant kingdom and deepens our understanding of the evolution of the phytohormone ABA.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • transcription factor
  • genome wide identification
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • cell wall
  • dna methylation
  • bioinformatics analysis
  • genome wide analysis
  • dna damage
  • computed tomography
  • single cell
  • dna repair