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Expression Analysis of Sugarcane Aquaporin Genes under Water Deficit
Author(s) -
Manassés Daniel da Silva,
Roberta Lane de Oliveira Silva,
José Ribamar Costa FerreiraNeto,
Ana Carolina Ribeiro Guimarães,
Daniela Truffi Veiga,
Sabrina Moutinho Chabregas,
William Lee Burnquist,
Günter Kahl,
Ana Maria BenkoIseppon,
Éderson Akio Kido
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of nucleic acids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.621
H-Index - 32
eISSN - 2090-021X
pISSN - 2090-0201
DOI - 10.1155/2013/763945
Subject(s) - aquaporin , gene isoform , biology , genotype , acclimatization , gene , phenotype , drought tolerance , transcriptome , gene expression , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , computational biology , botany
The present work is a pioneer study specifically addressing the aquaporin transcripts in sugarcane transcriptomes. Representatives of the four aquaporin subfamilies (PIP, TIP, SIP, and NIP), already described for higher plants, were identified. Forty-two distinct aquaporin isoforms were expressed in four HT-SuperSAGE libraries from sugarcane roots of drought-tolerant and -sensitive genotypes, respectively. At least 10 different potential aquaporin isoform targets and their respective unitags were considered to be promising for future studies and especially for the development of molecular markers for plant breeding. From those 10 isoforms, four ( So PIP2-4, So PIP2-6, Os PIP2-4, and S sPIP1-1) showed distinct responses towards drought, with divergent expressions between the bulks from tolerant and sensitive genotypes, when they were compared under normal and stress conditions. Two targets ( S sPIP1-1 and So PIP1-3/PIP1-4) were selected for validation via RT-qPCR and their expression patterns as detected by HT-SuperSAGE were confirmed. The employed validation strategy revealed that different genotypes share the same tolerant or sensitive phenotype, respectively, but may use different routes for stress acclimation, indicating the aquaporin transcription in sugarcane to be potentially genotype-specific.

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