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SiHDA9 interacts with SiHAT3.1 and SiHDA19 to repress dehydration responses through H3K9 deacetylation in foxtail millet.

Verandra KumarBabita SinghRoshan Kumar SinghNamisha SharmaMehanathan MuthamilarasanSamir Vishwanath SawantManoj Prasad
Published in: Journal of experimental botany (2023)
Climate change inflicts several stresses on plants, of which dehydration stress severely affects growth and productivity. C4 plants possess better adaptability to dehydration stress; however, the role of epigenetic modifications underlying this trait is unclear. Particularly, the molecular links between histone modifiers and their regulation remain elusive. In this study, genome-wide H3K9 acetylation (H3K9ac) enrichment using ChIP-seq was performed in two foxtail millet cultivars contrastingly differing in dehydration tolerance (IC403579; cv. IC4 - tolerant, and IC480117; cv. IC41 - sensitive). It revealed that a histone deacetylase, SiHDA9, was significantly up-regulated in the sensitive cultivar. Further characterization indicated that SiHDA9 interacts with SiHAT3.1 and SiHDA19 to form a repressor complex. SiHDA9 might be recruited through the SiHAT3.1 recognition sequence onto the upstream of dehydration-responsive genes to decrease H3K9 acetylation levels. The silencing of SiHDA9 resulted in the up-regulation of crucial genes, namely, SiRAB18, SiRAP2.4, SiP5CS2, SiRD22, SiPIP1;4 and SiLHCB2.3, which imparted dehydration tolerance in the sensitive cultivar (IC41). Overall, the study provides mechanistic insights into SiHDA9-mediated regulation of dehydration stress response in foxtail millet.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • histone deacetylase
  • climate change
  • gene expression
  • stress induced
  • risk assessment
  • transcription factor
  • high throughput
  • rna seq