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1.
Plant J ; 96(4): 801-814, 2018 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30118573

ABSTRACT

Drought stress is one of the most severe environmental constraints on plant production. Under environmental pressures, complex daily heliotropic adjustments of leaflet angles in soybean can help to reduce transpiration losses by diminishing light interception (paraheliotropism), increase diurnal carbon gain in sparse canopies and reduce carbon gain in dense canopies by solar tracking (diaheliotropism). The plant materials studied were cultivar BR 16 and its genetically engineered isoline P58, ectopically overexpressing AtDREB1A, which is involved in abiotic stress responses. We aimed to follow the movements of central and lateral leaflets in vegetative stages V7-V10 and reproductive stages R4-R5, integrating the reversible morphogenetic changes into an estimate of daily plant photosynthesis using three-dimensional modeling, and to analyze the production parameters of BR 16 and P58. The patterns of daily movements of central leaflets of BR 16 in V7-V10 and R4-R5 were similar, expressing fewer diaheliotropic movements under drought stress than under non-limiting water conditions. Daily heliotropic patterns of lateral leaflets in V7-V10 and R4-R5 showed more diaheliotropic movements in drought-stressed P58 plants than in those grown under non-limiting water conditions. Leaf area in R4-R5 was generally higher in P58 than in BR 16. Drought significantly affected gas exchange and vegetative and reproductive architectural features. DREB1A could be involved in various responses to drought stress. Compared with the parental BR 16, P58 copes with drought through better compensation between diaheliotropic and paraheliotropic movements, finer tuning of water-use efficiency, a lower transpiration rate, higher leaf area and higher pod abortion to accomplish the maximum possible grain production under continued drought conditions.


Subject(s)
Glycine max/genetics , Soybean Proteins/genetics , Stress, Physiological/genetics , Droughts , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Photosynthesis/genetics , Plant Development/genetics , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified/genetics , Plants, Genetically Modified/metabolism , Soybean Proteins/metabolism , Glycine max/metabolism
2.
Transgenic Res ; 23(1): 75-87, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23807320

ABSTRACT

The development of drought tolerant plants is a high priority because the area suffering from drought is expected to increase in the future due to global warming. One strategy for the development of drought tolerance is to genetically engineer plants with transcription factors (TFs) that regulate the expression of several genes related to abiotic stress defense responses. This work assessed the performance of soybean plants overexpressing the TF DREB1A under drought conditions in the field and in the greenhouse. Drought was simulated in the greenhouse by progressively drying the soil of pot cultures of the P58 and P1142 lines. In the field, the performance of the P58 line and of 09D-0077, a cross between the cultivars BR16 and P58, was evaluated under four different water regimes: irrigation, natural drought (no irrigation) and water stress created using rain-out shelters in the vegetative or reproductive stages. Although the dehydration-responsive element-binding protein (DREB) plants did not outperform the cultivar BR16 in terms of yield, some yield components were increased when drought was introduced during the vegetative stage, such as the number of seeds, the number of pods with seeds and the total number of pods. The greenhouse data suggest that the higher survival rates of DREB plants are because of lower water use due to lower transpiration rates under well watered conditions. Further studies are needed to better characterize the soil and atmospheric conditions under which these plants may outperform the non-transformed parental plants.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Droughts , Glycine max/genetics , Transcription Factors/genetics , Adaptation, Physiological/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Plants, Genetically Modified , Seeds/genetics , Seeds/growth & development , Glycine max/growth & development , Water/metabolism
3.
PLoS One ; 8(5): e62294, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23667465

ABSTRACT

Soybean farming has faced several losses in productivity due to drought events in the last few decades. However, plants have molecular mechanisms to prevent and protect against water deficit injuries, and transcription factors play an important role in triggering different defense mechanisms. Understanding the expression patterns of transcription factors in response to water deficit and to environmental diurnal changes is very important for unveiling water deficit stress tolerance mechanisms. Here, we analyzed the expression patterns of ten APETALA2/Ethylene Responsive Element Binding-like (AP2/EREB-like) transcription factors in two soybean genotypes (BR16: drought-sensitive; and Embrapa 48: drought-tolerant). According to phylogenetic and domain analyses, these genes can be included in the DREB and ERF subfamilies. We also analyzed a GmDRIP-like gene that encodes a DREB negative regulator. We detected the up-regulation of 9 GmAP2/EREB-like genes and identified transcriptional differences that were dependent on the levels of the stress applied and the tissue type analyzed (the expression of the GmDREB1F-like gene, for example, was four times higher in roots than in leaves). The GmDRIP-like gene was not induced by water deficit in BR16 during the longest periods of stress, but was significantly induced in Embrapa 48; this suggests a possible genetic/molecular difference between the responses of these cultivars to water deficit stress. Additionally, RNAseq gene expression analysis over a 24-h time course indicates that the expression patterns of several GmDREB-like genes are subject to oscillation over the course of the day, indicating a possible circadian regulation.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Glycine max/genetics , Plant Proteins/genetics , Transcription Factors/genetics , Water/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Droughts , Evolution, Molecular , Genotype , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Glycine max/physiology , Transcription Factors/chemistry
4.
Biosci. j. (Online) ; 29(2): 264-279, mar./apr. 2013. tab, ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-914387

ABSTRACT

Understanding the impact of Asian soybean rust on soybean yield is of great importance in the crop simulation model for this crop become it is possible to predict yield using different sowing dates and growth conditions. The goal of this study were to evaluate the performance of two soybean cultivars in Triângulo Mineiro/Alto Paranaíba, MG, Brazil and the effects of soybean rust on the yield of these cultivars using the CSM-CROPGRO Soybean model. Two soybean cultivars "NK 7074" (early) and "UFUS-Impacta" (medium late), which differ in their development cycles, were growing in Uberaba city during the 2009/2010 growing season. The validation for cultivar "UFUS-Impacta" was conducted comparing the measured and simulated yield data considering three different sowing dates in the "Uberlândia" city during the 2002/2003 growing season. Daily meteorological data obtained from six meteorological stations of the National Institute of Meteorology (INMET). To determine the performance of the soybean cultivars and the effect of soybean rust on yield, three different scenarios were used: no occurrence of rust (NOR) and occurrence of rust with inoculum concentrations of U5.000 and U10.000 urediniospores/mL. For all environments studied, the early cultivar had the best performance than the medium late cultivar. Soybean rust had the most effect on yield for the U10.000 scenario than for the U5.000 scenario. The best soybean performance occurred for "Araxá" and "Uberaba" cities. The SouthSoutheast area of the "Triângulo Mineiro/Alto Paranaíba" region was the most sensitive to the effect of rust on yield compared to the North region.


Compreender o impacto da ferrugem asiática na produtividade da soja é de grande importância para os modelos de simulação dessa cultura, pois pode-se prever a produtividade utilizando-se diferentes datas de semeadura e condições de crescimento. O objetivo deste estudo foi analisar a performance de duas cultivares de soja na região do Triângulo Mineiro/Alto Paranaíba, MG, Brasil e os efeitos da ferrugem asiática da soja na produtividade desses cultivares utilizando o modelo CSM-CROPGRO Soybean. Duas cultivares de soja NK 7074 (precoce) e UFUS-Impacta (semitardia), as quais diferem nos seus ciclos de desenvolvimento, foram cultivadas em Uberaba na safra 2009/2010. A validação para a cultivar UFUS-Impacta foi conduzida comparando os dados observados e simulados de produtividade considerando três diferentes datas de semeadura na safra 2002/2003 em Uberlândia, MG. Foram utilizados dados meteorológicos diários de seis estações meteorológicas do Instituto Nacional de Meteorologia (INMET). Para determinar o desempenho das cultivares de soja e o efeito da ferrugem na produtividade, utilizou-se três diferentes cenários denominados de: não ocorrência de ferrugem (NOR) e ocorrência de ferrugem nas concentrações de inóculo de U5.000 e U10.000 urediniósporos/mL. Para todos os ambientes estudados, a cultivar precoce teve o melhor desempenho em relação a cultivar semi-tardia. A ferrugem da soja teve maior impacto na produção para o cenário U10.000 do que para o cenário U5.000. O melhor desempenho das cultivares de soja foram para as cidades de Araxá e Uberaba. A área Sul-Sudeste do Triângulo Mineiro/Alto Paranaíba foi a mais sensível ao efeito da ferrugem na produtividade em comparação com a região norte.


Subject(s)
Glycine max , Crop Production , Efficiency , Phakopsora pachyrhizi
5.
Genet Mol Biol ; 35(1 (suppl)): 304-14, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22802715

ABSTRACT

Soybean has a wide range of applications in the industry and, due to its crop potential, its improvement is widely desirable. During drought conditions, soybean crops suffer significant losses in productivity. Therefore, understanding the responses of the soybean under this stress is an effective way of targeting crop improvement techniques. In this study, we employed the Suppressive Subtractive Hybridization (SSH) technique to investigate differentially expressed genes under water deficit conditions. Embrapa 48 and BR 16 soybean lines, known as drought-tolerant and -sensitive, respectively, were grown hydroponically and subjected to different short-term periods of stress by withholding the nutrient solution. Using this approach, we have identified genes expressed during the early response to water deficit in roots and leaves. These genes were compared among the lines to assess probable differences in the plant transcriptomes. In general, similar biochemical processes were predominant in both cultivars; however, there were more considerable differences between roots and leaves of Embrapa 48. Moreover, we present here a fast, clean and straightforward method to obtain drought-stressed root tissues and a large enriched collection of transcripts expressed by soybean plants under water deficit that can be useful for further studies towards the understanding of plant responses to stress.

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