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Physiological and Transcriptomic Responses of Bok Choy to Heat Stress

Authors :
Cuina Dong
Xixuan Peng
Xiaona Yang
Chenggang Wang
Lingyun Yuan
Guohu Chen
Xiaoyan Tang
Wenjie Wang
Jianqiang Wu
Shidong Zhu
Xingxue Huang
Jinlong Zhang
Jinfeng Hou
Source :
Plants, Vol 13, Iss 8, p 1093 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2024.

Abstract

High temperatures have adverse effects on the yield and quality of vegetables. Bok choy, a popular vegetable, shows varying resistance to heat. However, the mechanism underlying the thermotolerance of bok choy remains unclear. In this study, 26 bok choy varieties were identified in screening as being heat-resistant at the seedling stage; at 43 °C, it was possible to observe obvious heat damage in different bok choy varieties. The physiological and biochemical reactions of a heat-tolerant cultivar, Jinmei (J7), and a heat-sensitive cultivar, Sanyueman (S16), were analyzed in terms of the growth index, peroxide, and photosynthetic parameters. The results show that Jinmei has lower relative conductivity, lower peroxide content, and higher total antioxidant capacity after heat stress. We performed transcriptome analysis of the two bok choy varieties under heat stress and normal temperatures. Under heat stress, some key genes involved in sulfur metabolism, glutathione metabolism, and the ribosome pathway were found to be significantly upregulated in the heat-tolerant cultivar. The key genes of each pathway were screened according to their fold-change values. In terms of sulfur metabolism, genes related to protease activity were significantly upregulated. Glutathione synthetase (GSH2) in the glutathione metabolism pathway and the L3e, L23, and S19 genes in the ribosomal pathway were significantly upregulated in heat-stressed cultivars. These results suggest that the total antioxidant capacity and heat injury repair capacity are higher in Jinmei than in the heat-sensitive variety, which might be related to the specific upregulation of genes in certain metabolic pathways after heat stress.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22237747
Volume :
13
Issue :
8
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Plants
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.87f77229a0b74432bfb46dae3d22a455
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants13081093