Overexpression of Water-Responsive Genes Promoted by Elevated CO 2 Reduces ROS and Enhances Drought Tolerance in Coffea Species.
Isabel MarquesIsabel FernandesOctávio S PauloDora BatistaFernando C LidonFábio Luiz PartelliFábio M DamattaAna I Ribeiro-BarrosJosé Cochicho RamalhoPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
Drought is a major constraint to plant growth and productivity worldwide and will aggravate as water availability becomes scarcer. Although elevated air [CO 2 ] might mitigate some of these effects in plants, the mechanisms underlying the involved responses are poorly understood in woody economically important crops such as Coffea . This study analyzed transcriptome changes in Coffea canephora cv. CL153 and C. arabica cv. Icatu exposed to moderate (MWD) or severe water deficits (SWD) and grown under ambient (aCO 2 ) or elevated (eCO 2 ) air [CO 2 ]. We found that changes in expression levels and regulatory pathways were barely affected by MWD, while the SWD condition led to a down-regulation of most differentially expressed genes (DEGs). eCO 2 attenuated the impacts of drought in the transcripts of both genotypes but mostly in Icatu, in agreement with physiological and metabolic studies. A predominance of protective and reactive oxygen species (ROS)-scavenging-related genes, directly or indirectly associated with ABA signaling pathways, was found in Coffea responses, including genes involved in water deprivation and desiccation, such as protein phosphatases in Icatu, and aspartic proteases and dehydrins in CL153, whose expression was validated by qRT-PCR. The existence of a complex post-transcriptional regulatory mechanism appears to occur in Coffea explaining some apparent discrepancies between transcriptomic, proteomic, and physiological data in these genotypes.
Keyphrases
- plant growth
- reactive oxygen species
- transcription factor
- climate change
- poor prognosis
- arabidopsis thaliana
- genome wide
- gene expression
- binding protein
- signaling pathway
- computed tomography
- rna seq
- genome wide identification
- cell proliferation
- particulate matter
- traumatic brain injury
- magnetic resonance imaging
- small molecule
- drug delivery
- electronic health record
- big data
- dna methylation
- bioinformatics analysis
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- label free