Expressing the sunflower transcription factor HaHB11 in maize improves waterlogging and defoliation tolerance.
Jesica RaineriLuciano Nicolás CaraballoNicolás RigalliMargarita PortapilaMaría Elena OteguiRaquel Lía ChanPublished in: Plant physiology (2022)
The sunflower (Helianthus annuus) transcription factor HaHB11 (H. annuus Homeobox 11) belongs to the homeodomain-leucine zipper family and confers improved yield to maize (Zea mays) hybrids (HiII × B73) and lines. Here we report that transgenic maize lines expressing HaHB11 exhibited better performance under waterlogging, both in greenhouse and field trials carried out during three growth cycles. Transgenic plants had increased chlorophyll content, wider stems, more nodal roots, greater total aerial biomass, a higher harvest index, and increased plant grain yield. Under severe defoliation caused by a windstorm during flowering, transgenic genotypes were able to set more grains than controls. This response was confirmed in controlled defoliation assays. Hybrids generated by crossing B73 HaHB11 lines with the contrasting Mo17 lines were also tested in the field and exhibited the same beneficial traits as the parental lines, compared with their respective controls. Moreover, they were less penalized by stress than commercial hybrids. Waterlogging tolerance increased via improvement of the root system, including more xylem vessels, reduced tissue damage, less superoxide accumulation, and altered carbohydrate metabolism. Multivariate analyses corroborated the robustness of the differential traits observed. Furthermore, canopy spectral reflectance data, computing 29 vegetation indices associated with biomass, chlorophyll, and abiotic stress, helped to distinguish genotypes as well as their growing conditions. Altogether the results reported here indicate that this sunflower gene constitutes a suitable tool to improve maize plants for environments prone to waterlogging and/or wind defoliation.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- genome wide identification
- genome wide
- dna binding
- oxidative stress
- dna methylation
- optical coherence tomography
- early onset
- climate change
- lymph node
- copy number
- anaerobic digestion
- stress induced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- squamous cell carcinoma
- nitric oxide
- arabidopsis thaliana
- magnetic resonance
- radiation therapy
- cell wall
- municipal solid waste
- rectal cancer
- sewage sludge