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Kiwifruit (
Actinidia chinensis
) R1R2R3-MYB transcription factor
AcMYB3R
enhances drought and salinity tolerance in
Arabidopsis thaliana
ZHANG Ya-bin, TANG Wei, WANG Li-huan, HU Ya-wen, LIU Xian-wen, LIU Yong-sheng
2019, 18 (
2
): 417-427. DOI:
10.1016/S2095-3119(18)62127-6
Abstract
(
313
)
PDF
(7925KB)(
224
)
Kiwifruit is an important fruit crop that is highly sensitive to environmental stresses, such as drought, heat, cold, water logging and phytopathogens. Therefore it is indispensable to identify stress-responsive candidate genes in kiwifruit cultivars for the stress resistance improvement. Here we report the isolation and characterization of a novel kiwifruit R1R2R3-MYB homolog (
AcMYB3R
) whose expression was induced by drought, salinity and cold stress.
In vitro
assays showed that AcMYB3R is a nuclear protein with transcriptional activation activity by binding to the cis-element of the kiwifruit orthologue of G2/M phase-specific gene
KNOLLE
. The
Arabidopsis
transgenic plants overexpressing
AcMYB3R
showed drastically enhanced tolerance to drought and salt stress. The expressions of stress-responsive genes such as
RD29A
,
RD29B
,
COR15A
and
RD22
were prominently up-regulated by ectopic expression of
AcMYB3R
. Our study provides a valuable piece of information for functional genomics studies of kiwifruit and molecular breeding in improving stress tolerance for crop production.
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Overexpression of
AmDUF1517
enhanced tolerance to salinity, drought, and cold stress in transgenic cotton
HAO Yu-qiong, LU Guo-qing, WANG Li-hua, WANG Chun-ling, GUO Hui-ming, LI Yi-fei, CHENG Hong-mei
2018, 17 (
10
): 2204-2214. DOI:
10.1016/S2095-3119(17)61897-5
Abstract
(
474
)
PDF
(4492KB)(
386
)
As abiotic stresses become more severe as a result of global climate changes, the growth and development of plants are restricted. In the development of agricultural crops with greater stress tolerance,
AmDUF1517
had been isolated from the highly stress-tolerant shrub
Ammopiptanthus mongolicus
, and can significantly enhance stress tolerance when inserted in Arabidopsis thaliana. In this study, we inserted this gene into cotton to analyze its potential for conferring stress tolerance. Two independent transgenic cotton lines were used. Southern blot analyses indicated that
AmDUF1517
was integrated into the cotton genome. Physiological analysis demonstrated that
AmDUF1517
-transgenic cotton had stronger resistance than the control when treated with salt, drought, and cold stresses. Further analysis showed that trans-
AmDUF1517
cotton displayed significantly higher antioxidant enzyme (superoxide dismutase (SOD), peroxidase (POD), catalase (CAT), and glutathione S-transferase (GST)) activity and less reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation, which suggests that overexpression of
AmDUF1517
can improve cotton resistance to stress by maintaining ROS homeostasis, as well as by alleviating cell membrane injury. These results imply that
AmDUF1517
is a candidate gene in improving cotton resistance to abiotic stress.
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Effects of Reduced Nocturnal Temperature on Performance and Behavior of Nursery Pigs
WANG Li-hua, LI Yu-zhi, Lee J Johnston
2012, 12 (
9
): 1509-1516. DOI:
10.1016/S1671-2927(00)8683
Abstract
(
1318
)
PDF in ScienceDirect
Previous studies suggested that pigs prefer lower environmental temperatures during nighttime compared to daytime. So reducing nocturnal temperature in nursery barns may not jeopardize performance or welfare of pigs, but can save energy for heating the barn. A study was conducted to investigate growth performance and behavioral response of nursery pigs to reduced nocturnal temperature. This study was conducted in four replicates, each utilizing 270 newly weaned pigs and lasting for 5 wk. Temperature setpoint in the control room (CON) was started at 30°C and decreased by 2°C per week. In the treatment room (RNT), temperature setpoint was maintained same as in CON between 7:00 h and 19:00 h, and reduced by 8°C between 19:00 h and 7:00 h starting from d 5. Growth performance (15 pens/room, 9 pigs/pen, BW=(6.3±0.61) kg) was monitored for 5 wk, and behaviors in 6 pens in each room were video-recorded for 24 h 3 d after being exposed to the experimental temperature. Instantaneous scan sampling was performed to determine time budgets for standing, sitting, eating, drinking, belly nosing, three postures of lying, and huddling. Two focal pigs were continuously viewed to record duration and occurrence of eating and drinking. Reduced nocturnal temperature did not affect the growth performance of the pigs, time spent standing, sitting, total lying and eating or duration and frequencies of eating and drinking (all P>0.10). However, RNT increased time spent lying sternal (83 vs. 72%, P<0.001) and number of pigs that were huddling (70 vs. 50% of lying pigs, P<0.001), and decreased time spent lying laterally (0.8 vs. 4.6%, P<0.001), lying half laterally (5.3 vs. 11.0%, P<0.001), and belly nosing (0.9 vs. 1.7%, P=0.01) during nighttime. These results indicate that nursery pigs adopted the posture of lying sternal and huddled together to reduce heat loss from their body surface to maintain thermal balance and growth performance in RNT. Such mild reduction in nocturnal temperature in the nursery barn can save energy for heating the barn without negative effects on performance and behavior of nursery pigs.
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