Overexpression of Transcription Factor OsWR2 Regulates Wax and Cutin Biosynthesis in Rice and Enhances its Tolerance to Water Deficit

Plant Molecular Biology Reporter - Tập 32 - Trang 719-731 - 2013
Xiaoyun Zhou1,2, Matthew A. Jenks3, Juan Liu1, Ailing Liu1,2, Xiangwen Zhang1,2, Jianhua Xiang1, Jie Zou1, Yan Peng1, Xinbo Chen1,2
1Hunan Provincial Key Laboratory for Germplasm Innovation and Utilization of Crop, Hunan Agricultural University, Changsha, China
2College of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Hunan Agricultural University, Changsha, China
3United States Arid Land Agricultural Research Center, USDA-ARS, Maricopa, USA

Tóm tắt

Drought is the major abiotic stress limiting crop production. Plant cuticle represents the outer-most layer of the epidermis and plays an important role in decreasing plant water loss under drought stress by restricting non-stomatal transpiration. We report here that the Wax Synthesis Regulatory 2 gene (OsWR2) in rice (Oryza sativa L.) is highly expressed in epidermal tissues and contributes to the transcriptional regulation of both cuticular wax and cutin biosynthesis in rice cuticle. Overexpression of OsWR2 in rice increased the total cuticular wax level by 48.6 % in leaves and by 72.4 % in panicles. Of the major wax classes, aldehydes increased most in leaves, and alkanes increased most in panicles. Total cutin amounts were increased by 48.1 % in leaves and 65.9 % in panicles of rice overexpressing OsWR2, and these increases were due primarily to the increase in ω-OH and di-OH acids. Our results showed that 19 genes previously associated with wax and cutin biosynthesis were up-regulated in OsWR2 overexpressors. Overexpression of OsWR2 also altered cuticular wax crystallization and cuticle membrane ultrastructure. Furthermore, OsWR2 overexpression in rice decreased leaf chlorophyll leaching rate, reduced water loss rate, and enhanced tolerance to water-limited conditions. We demonstrate in this report that OsWR2 regulates wax and cutin biosynthesis differently than does the OsWR1 homologue, and plays a major role in controlling cuticle permeability. The increased resistance to water deficit conditions by OsWR2 overexpression in rice elucidates a potential new strategy for genetic improvement of plant drought tolerance.

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