Journals
  Publication Years
  Keywords
Search within results Open Search
Please wait a minute...
For Selected: Toggle Thumbnails
The HD-Zip transcription factor GhHB12 represses plant height by regulating the auxin signaling in cotton
LIU Yan, WANG Wei-ping, ZHANG Lin, ZHU Long-fu, ZHANG Xian-long, HE Xin
2023, 22 (7): 2015-2024.   DOI: 10.1016/j.jia.2022.09.022
Abstract248)      PDF in ScienceDirect      
Upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) is the most important natural textile fiber crop worldwide. Plant height (PH) is a significant component of plant architecture, strongly influencing crop cultivation patterns, overall yield, and economic coefficient. However, cotton genes regulating plant height have not been fully identified. Previously, an HD-Zip gene (GhHB12) was isolated and characterized in cotton, which regulates the abiotic and biotic stress responses and the growth and development processes. In this study, we showed that GhHB12 was induced by auxin. Moreover, overexpression of GhHB12 induces the expression of HY5, ATH1, and HAT4, represses the spatial-temporal distribution, polar transport, and signaling of auxin, alters the expression of genes involved in cell wall expansion, and restrains the plant height in cotton. These results suggest a role of GhHB12 in regulating cotton plant height, which could be achieved by affecting the auxin signaling and cell wall expansion.
Reference | Related Articles | Metrics
Association mapping of lignin response to Verticillium wilt through an eight-way MAGIC population in Upland cotton
TIAN Xiao-min, HAN Peng, WANG Jing, SHAO Pan-xia, AN Qiu-shuang, Nurimanguli AINI, YANG Qing-yong, YOU Chun-yuan, LIN Hai-rong, ZHU Long-fu, PAN Zhen-yuan, NIE Xin-hui
2023, 22 (5): 1324-1337.   DOI: 10.1016/j.jia.2022.08.034
Abstract398)      PDF in ScienceDirect      

Lignin metabolism plays a pivotal role in plant defense against pathogens and is always positively correlated as a response to pathogen infection.  Thus, understanding resistance genes against pathogens in plants depends on a genetic analysis of lignin response.  In the study, eight upland cotton lines were used to construct a multi-parent advanced generation intercross (MAGIC) population (n=280), which exhibited peculiar characteristics from the convergence of various alleles coding for advantageous traits.  To measure the lignin response to Verticillium wilt (LRVW), artificial disease nursery (ADN) and rotation nursery (RN) were prepared for MAGIC population planting in four environments.  The stem lignin contents were collected, and the LRVW was measured with the lignin value of ADN/RN in each environment, which showed great variation.  A total of 9323 high-quality single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers obtained from the Cotton-SNP63K array were employed for genotyping the MAGIC population.  The SNPs were distributed through the whole genome with 4.78 SNP/Mb density, ranging from 1.14 (ChrA06) to 10.08 (ChrD08).  A genome-wide association study was performed using a mixed linear model (MLM) for LRVW, and three stable quantitative trait loci (QTLs), qLRVW-A04, qLRVW-A10 and qLRVW-D05, were identified in more than two environments.  Two key candidate genes, Ghi_D05G01046 and Ghi_D05G01221, were selected within the QTLs through the combination of variations in the coding sequence, induced expression patterns, and function annotations, both of which presented nonsynonymous mutations in coding regions and were strongly induced by Verticillium dahliae. Ghi_D05G01046 encodes a leucine-rich extensin (LRx) protein, which is involved in Arabidopsis cell wall biosynthesis and organization.  Ghi_D05G01221 encodes a transcriptional co-repressor novel interactor of jaz (NINJA), which functions in the jasmonic acid (JA) signaling pathway.  In summary, the study creates valuable genetic resources for breeding and QTL mapping and opens up a new perspective to uncover the genetic basis of VW resistance in upland cotton.

Reference | Related Articles | Metrics