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De novo transcriptome analysis of Medicago falcata reveals novel insights about the mechanisms underlying abiotic stressresponsive pathway.

Authors :
Zhenyan Miao
Wei Xu
Daofeng Li
Xiaona Hu
Jiaxing Liu
Rongxue Zhang
Zongyong Tong
Jiangli Dong
Zhen Su
Liwei Zhang
Min Sun
Wenjie Li
Zhenglin Du
Songnian Hu
Tao Wang
Source :
BMC Genomics; 10/19/2015, Vol. 16, p1-18, 18p, 4 Diagrams, 2 Charts, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background: The entire world is facing a deteriorating environment. Understanding the mechanisms underlying plant responses to external abiotic stresses is important for breeding stress-tolerant crops and herbages. Phytohormones play critical regulatory roles in plants in the response to external and internal cues to regulate growth and development. Medicago falcata is one of the stress-tolerant candidate leguminous species and is able to fix atmospheric nitrogen. This ability allows leguminous plants to grow in nitrogen deficient soils. Methods: We performed Illumina sequencing of cDNA prepared from abiotic stress treated M. falcata. Sequencedreads were assembled to provide a transcriptome resource. Transcripts were annotated using BLASTsearches against the NCBI non-redundant database and gene ontology definitions were assigned. Acomparison among the three abiotic stress treated samples was carried out. The expression of transcriptswas confirmed with qRT-PCR. Results: We present an abiotic stress-responsive M. falcata transcriptome using next-generation sequencing data from samples grown under standard, dehydration, high salinity, and cold conditions. We combined reads from all samples and de novo assembled 98,515 transcripts to build the M. falcata gene index. A comprehensive analysis of the transcriptome revealed abiotic stress-responsive mechanisms underlying the metabolism and core signalling components of major phytohormones. We identified nod factor signalling pathways during early symbiotic nodulation that are modified by abiotic stresses. Additionally, a global comparison of homology between the M. falcata and M. truncatula transcriptomes, along with five other leguminous species, revealed a high level of global sequence conservation within the family. Conclusions: M. falcata is shown to be a model candidate for studying abiotic stress-responsive mechanisms in legumes. This global gene expression analysis provides new insights into the biochemical and molecular mechanisms involved in the acclimation to abiotic stresses. Our data provides many gene candidates that might be used for herbage and crop breeding. Additionally, FalcataBase (http://bioinformatics.cau.edu.cn/falcata/) was built for storing these data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712164
Volume :
16
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Genomics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
110548007
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-015-2019-x