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Gene expression studies of Saccharum spontaneum , a wild relative of sugarcane in response to salinity stress
Author(s) -
Kasirajan Lakshmi,
Valiyaparambth Rabisha,
Velu Janani,
Hari Haritha,
Srinivasavedantham Vasantha,
Athaiappan Selvi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
biotechnology and applied biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.468
H-Index - 70
eISSN - 1470-8744
pISSN - 0885-4513
DOI - 10.1002/bab.1923
Subject(s) - salinity , proline , gene , biology , gene expression , nitrate reductase , protein subunit , botany , biochemistry , enzyme , amino acid , ecology
Abstract The study is aimed to assess the morphological, physiological, and molecular responses of seven Saccharum spontaneum clones for salinity stress. These clones (IND‐07‐1462, IND‐07‐1465, IND‐07‐1470, IND‐07‐1471, IND 16–1761, IND 16–1762, and IND 16–1763) were subjected to salinity stress at two different concentrations of electrical conductivity 6 and 8 ds/m after 60 days of planting. All seven genotypes showed a decrease in relative water content and nitrate reductase activity with an increase in severity of salt stress. The effect was more pronounced in IND‐07‐1471, while IND‐16‐1762 exhibited only a minimum drop. Similarly we observed an increase in proline content and lipid peroxidation activity for the genotype IND‐07‐1471, while IND‐16‐1762 showed minimum increase. Molecular profiling of genes/transcription factors like salt overly sensitive, responsive to abscissic acid, dirigent, myeloblastosis, ethylene responsive factor associated with salinity stress tolerance showed 19‐, 18‐, 17‐, 10‐, and 9‐fold increased expression at 8 ds/m of salinity stress, respectively, in IND‐16‐1762 showed. Based on the evidences obtained from expression profiling, we have cloned the conserved regions of RAB and SOS1 genes. The domain of SOS and RAB was identified as a regulatory subunit of cAMP‐dependent protein kinases which is involved in a signaling pathway.