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Gene mining in halophytes: functional identification of stress tolerance genes in Lepidium crassifolium
Author(s) -
Rigó Gábor,
Valkai Ildikó,
Faragó Dóra,
Kiss Edina,
Van Houdt Sara,
Van de Steene Nancy,
Hannah Matthew A.,
Szabados László
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
plant, cell and environment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.646
H-Index - 200
eISSN - 1365-3040
pISSN - 0140-7791
DOI - 10.1111/pce.12768
Subject(s) - biology , halophyte , arabidopsis thaliana , complementary dna , arabidopsis , gene , cdna library , transgene , genetics , genetically modified crops , osmotic shock , microbiology and biotechnology , salinity , mutant , ecology
Extremophile plants are valuable sources of genes conferring tolerance traits, which can be explored to improve stress tolerance of crops. Lepidium crassifolium is a halophytic relative of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana , and displays tolerance to salt, osmotic and oxidative stresses. We have employed the modified Conditional cDNA Overexpression System to transfer a cDNA library from L . crassifolium to the glycophyte A . thaliana . By screening for salt, osmotic and oxidative stress tolerance through in vitro growth assays and non‐destructive chlorophyll fluorescence imaging, 20 Arabidopsis lines were identified with superior performance under restrictive conditions. Several cDNA inserts were cloned and confirmed to be responsible for the enhanced tolerance by analysing independent transgenic lines. Examples include full‐length cDNAs encoding proteins with high homologies to GDSL‐lipase/esterase or acyl CoA‐binding protein or proteins without known function, which could confer tolerance to one or several stress conditions. Our results confirm that random gene transfer from stress tolerant to sensitive plant species is a valuable tool to discover novel genes with potential for biotechnological applications.

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