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Identification of the dehydrin gene family from grapevine species and analysis of their responsiveness to various forms of abiotic and biotic stress

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TLDR
The grapevine DHN family comprises four divergent members and it seems that DHN1 provides the main stress-responsive function, suggesting a close relationship between expression patterns, physicochemical properties, and cis-regulatory elements in the promoter regions of the DHN genes.
Abstract
Dehydrins (DHNs) protect plant cells from desiccation damage during environmental stress, and also participate in host resistance to various pathogens. In this study, we aimed to identify and characterize the DHN gene families from Vitis vinifera and wild V. yeshanensis, which is tolerant to both drought and cold, and moderately resistant to powdery mildew. Four DHN genes were identified in both V. vinifera and V. yeshanensis, which shared a high sequence identity between the two species but little homology between the genes themselves. These genes were designated DHN1, DHN2, DHN3 and DHN4. All four of the DHN proteins were highly hydrophilic and were predicted to be intrinsically disordered, but they differed in their isoelectric points, kinase selectivities and number of functional motifs. Also, the expression profiles of each gene differed appreciably from one another. Grapevine DHN1 was not expressed in vegetative tissues under normal growth conditions, but was induced by drought, cold, heat, embryogenesis, as well as the application of abscisic acid (ABA), salicylic acid (SA), and methyl jasmonate (MeJA). It was expressed earlier in V. yeshanensis under drought conditions than in V. vinifera, and also exhibited a second round of up-regulation in V. yeshanensis following inoculation with Erysiphe necator, which was not apparent in V. vinifera. Like DHN1, DHN2 was induced by cold, heat, embryogenesis and ABA; however, it exhibited no responsiveness to drought, E. necator infection, SA or MeJA, and was also expressed constitutively in vegetative tissues under normal growth conditions. Conversely, DHN3 was only expressed during seed development at extremely low levels, and DHN4 was expressed specifically during late embryogenesis. Neither DHN3 nor DHN4 exhibited responsiveness to any of the treatments carried out in this study. Interestingly, the presence of particular cis-elements within the promoter regions of each gene was positively correlated with their expression profiles. The grapevine DHN family comprises four divergent members. While it is likely that their functions overlap to some extent, it seems that DHN1 provides the main stress-responsive function. In addition, our results suggest a close relationship between expression patterns, physicochemical properties, and cis-regulatory elements in the promoter regions of the DHN genes.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Disorder and function: a review of the dehydrin protein family.

TL;DR: In vitro experimental evidence from biochemical assays and localization experiments suggests multiple roles for dehydrins, including membrane protection, cryoprotection of enzymes, and protection from reactive oxygen species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution and expression analysis of the grape (Vitis vinifera L.) WRKY gene family

TL;DR: Phylogenetic tree and synteny analysis revealed the specific evolutionary relationship of these genes and differential expression patterns indicated their possible roles in specific tissues and under different stresses.
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Osmoregulation and its actions during the drought stress in plants

TL;DR: This review highlights the role of osmolytes in water-stressed plants and of enzymes entailed in their metabolism and will be useful, especially for researchers working on the development of drought-resistant crops by using the metabolic-engineering techniques.
Journal ArticleDOI

Abiotic stress effects on grapevine ( Vitis vinifera L.): Focus on abscisic acid-mediated consequences on secondary metabolism and berry quality

TL;DR: Being stress response mainly ABA mediated, feeding of exogenous ABA to grapevine organs is reviewed as a tool to enhance grape quality and to control abiotic stress.
Journal ArticleDOI

Group II late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins: structural and functional aspects in plant abiotic stress

TL;DR: The present review focuses on the varied structural aspects which ultimately dictate the multifarious functions of the Group II LEA proteins when the plants are exposed to intense desiccation.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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