Frontiers in Plant Science (Sep 2021)

Genome-Wide Analysis of SRNF Genes in Gossypium hirsutum Reveals the Role of GhSRNF18 in Primary Root Growth

  • Li Yu,
  • Shuojun Zhang,
  • Hailun Liu,
  • Yufei Wang,
  • Yiting Wei,
  • Xujiao Ren,
  • Qian Zhang,
  • Junkang Rong,
  • Junkang Rong,
  • Chendong Sun

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.731834
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

Root systems are instrumental for water and nutrient uptake and the anchorage of plants in the soil. Root regulating GL2-interacting repressors (GIRs) contain a Short RING-like Zinc-Finger (SRNF) domain, but there has been no comprehensive characterization about this gene family in any plant species. Here, we renamed the GIR-like proteins as SRNF proteins due to their conserved domain and identified 140 SRNF genes from 16 plant species including 24 GhSRNF genes in Gossypium hirsutum. Phylogenetic analysis of the SRNFs revealed both similarities and divergences between five subfamilies. Notably, synteny analysis revealed that polyploidization and whole-genome duplication contribute to the expansion of the GhSRNF gene family. Various cis-acting regulatory elements were shown to be pertinent to light, phytohormone, defense responsive, and meristem regulation. Furthermore, GhSRNF2/15 were predominantly expressed in root, whereas the expression of GhSRNF18 is positively correlated with the primary root (PR) length in G. hirsutum, quantified by quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR). Over-expression of GhSRNF18 in Arabidopsis and virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) of GhSRNF18 in G. hirsutum has revealed the role of GhSRNF18 in PR growth. The over-expression of GhSRNF18 in Arabidopsis resulted in an increase of meristematic activities and auxin accumulations in PRs, which were consistent with the transcriptomic data. Our results suggested that GhSRNF18 positively regulates PR growth. This study increased our understanding of the SRNF gene family in plants and provided a novel rationale for the further investigation of cotton root morphogenesis regulated by the GhSRNFs.

Keywords