Comparative transcriptional profiling of placenta and endosperm in developing maize kernels in response to water deficit

被引:107
作者
Yu, LX [1 ]
Setter, TL [1 ]
机构
[1] Cornell Univ, Dept Crop & Soil Sci, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1104/pp.014365
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
The early post-pollination phase of maize (Zea mays) development is particularly sensitive to water deficit stress. Using cDNA microarray, we studied transcriptional profiles of endosperm and placenta /pedicel tissues in developing maize kernels under water stress. At 9 d after pollination (DAP), placenta/ pedicel and endosperm differed considerably in their transcriptional responses. In placenta /pedicel, 79 genes were significantly affected by stress and of these 89% were up-regulated, whereas in endosperm, 56 genes were significantly affected and 82% of these were down-regulated. Only nine of the stress-regulated genes were in common between these tissues. Hierarchical cluster analysis indicated that different sets of genes were regulated in the two tissues. After rewatering at 9 DAP, profiles at 12 DAP suggested that two regulons exist, one for genes responding specifically to concurrent imposition of stress, and another for genes remaining affected after transient stress. In placenta, genes encoding recognized stress tolerance proteins, including heat shock proteins, chaperonins, and major intrinsic proteins, were the largest class of genes regulated, all of which were up-regulated. In contrast, in endosperm, genes in the cell division and growth category represented a large class of down-regulated genes. Several cell wall-degrading enzymes were expressed at lower levels than in controls, suggesting that stress delayed normal advance to programmed cell death in the central endosperm. We suggest that the responsiveness of placenta to whole-plant stress factors (water potential, abscisic acid, and sugar flux) and of endosperm to indirect factors may play key roles in determining the threshold for kernel abortion.
引用
收藏
页码:568 / 582
页数:15
相关论文
共 70 条
[1]   Cyclophilins and their possible role in the stress response [J].
Andreeva, L ;
Heads, R ;
Green, CJ .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PATHOLOGY, 1999, 80 (06) :305-315
[2]   WATER-DEFICIT IN DEVELOPING ENDOSPERM OF MAIZE - CELL-DIVISION AND NUCLEAR-DNA ENDOREDUPLICATION [J].
ARTLIP, TS ;
MADISON, JT ;
SETTER, TL .
PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT, 1995, 18 (09) :1034-1040
[3]   The many tales of a tail:: Carboxyl-terminal tail heterogeneity specializes histone H2A variants for defined chromatin function [J].
Ausió, J ;
Abbott, DW .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 2002, 41 (19) :5945-5949
[4]   Desiccation and osmotic stress increase the abundance of mRNA of the tonoplast aquaporin BobTIP26-1 in cauliflower cells [J].
Barrieu F. ;
Marty-Mazars D. ;
Thomas D. ;
Chaumont F. ;
Charbonnier M. ;
Marty F. .
Planta, 1999, 209 (1) :77-86
[5]   Molecular characterization of tobacco ribonucleotide reductase RNR1 and RNR2 cDNAs and cell cycle-regulated expression in synchronized plant cells [J].
Chabouté, ME ;
Combettes, B ;
Clément, B ;
Gigot, C ;
Philipps, G .
PLANT MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1998, 38 (05) :797-806
[6]   Characterization of a maize tonoplast aquaporin expressed in zones of cell division and elongation [J].
Chaumont, F ;
Barrieu, F ;
Herman, EM ;
Chrispeels, MJ .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1998, 117 (04) :1143-1152
[7]   Aquaporins constitute a large and highly divergent protein family in maize [J].
Chaumont, F ;
Barrieu, F ;
Wojcik, E ;
Chrispeels, MJ ;
Jung, R .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2001, 125 (03) :1206-1215
[8]   Calcium signaling through protein kinases. The Arabidopsis calcium-dependent protein kinase gene family [J].
Cheng, SH ;
Willmann, MR ;
Chen, HC ;
Sheen, J .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2002, 129 (02) :469-485
[9]   WATER DEFICIT EFFECTS ON CORN .2. GRAIN COMPONENTS [J].
CLAASSEN, MM ;
SHAW, RH .
AGRONOMY JOURNAL, 1970, 62 (05) :652-&
[10]   Differential regulation of small heat-shock genes in plants: Analysis of a water-stress-inducible and developmentally activated sunflower promoter [J].
Coca, MA ;
Almoguera, C ;
Thomas, TL ;
Jordano, J .
PLANT MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1996, 31 (04) :863-876