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Genome-wide identification of HD-ZIP transcription factors in maize and their regulatory roles in promoting drought tolerance

Research Authors
Xiao Qiu, GuoRui Wang, Salah Fatouh Abou-Elwafa, Jiaxu Fu, Zhixue Liu, PengYu Zhang, Xiaowen Xie, Lixia Ku, Ying Ma, XiaoKang Guan, Li Wei
Research Abstract

Drought is the main limiting factor of maize productivity, therefore improving drought tolerance in maize has potential practical importance. Cloning and functional verification of drought–tolerant genes is of great importance to understand molecular mechanisms under drought stress. Here, we employed a bioinformatic pipeline to identify 42 ZmHDZ drought responsive genes using previously reported maize transcriptomic datasets. The coding sequences, exon–intron structure and domain organization of all the 42 genes were identified. Phylogenetic analysis revealed evolutionary conservation of members of the ZmHDZ genes in maize. Several regulatory elements associated with drought tolerance were identified in the promoter regions of ZmHDZ genes, indicating the implication of these genes in plant response to drought stress. 42 ZmHDZ genes were distributed unevenly on 10 chromosomes, and 24 pairs of gene duplications were the segmental duplication. The expression of several ZmHDZ genes was upregulated under drought stress, and ZmHDZ9 overexpressing transgenic plants exhibited higher SOD and POD activities and higher accumulation of soluble proteins under drought stress which resulted in enhanced developed phenotype and improved resistance. The present study provides evidence for the evolutionary conservation of HD-ZIP transcription factors homologs in maize. The results further provide a comprehensive insight into the roles of ZmHDZ genes in regulating drought stress tolerance in maize.

Research Date
Research Department
Research Journal
Physiology and Molecular Biology of Plants
Research Publisher
Springer India
Research Rank
Q2
Research Vol
28
Research Website
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12298-022-01147-x
Research Year
2022
Research Pages
425-437