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Late Elongated Hypocotyl Positively Regulates Salt Stress Tolerance in Medicago truncatula .

Zhichao LuHaiyang LiuYiming KongLizhu WenYang ZhaoChuanen ZhouLu Han
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
Abiotic stress, such as drought, osmotic, and salinity stresses, seriously affects plant growth and crop production. Studying stress-resistant genes that enhance plant stress tolerance is an efficient way to facilitate the breeding of crop species with high stress tolerance. In this study, we reported that the core circadian clock component, the LATE ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL ( LHY ) orthologue MtLHY , plays a positive role in salt stress response in Medicago truncatula . The expression of MtLHY was induced by salt stress, and loss-of-function mutants of MtLHY were shown to be hypersensitive to salt treatment. However, overexpression of MtLHY improved salt stress tolerance through a higher accumulation of flavonoids. Consistently, exogenous flavonol application improved the salt stress tolerance in M. truncatula . Additionally, MtLHY was identified as a transcriptional activator of the flavonol synthase gene, MtFLS . Our findings revealed that MtLHY confers plant salt stress tolerance, at least by modulating the flavonoid biosynthesis pathway, which provides insight into salt stress tolerance that links the circadian clock with flavonoid biosynthesis.
Keyphrases
  • stress induced
  • climate change
  • poor prognosis
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • transcription factor
  • oxidative stress
  • heat shock protein
  • bioinformatics analysis