Plants (Mar 2022)

Characterization of the <i>TCP</i> Gene Family in <i>Chrysanthemum nankingense</i> and the Role of <i>CnTCP4</i> in Cold Tolerance

  • Chang Tian,
  • Lisheng Zhai,
  • Wenjing Zhu,
  • Xiangyu Qi,
  • Zhongyu Yu,
  • Haibin Wang,
  • Fadi Chen,
  • Likai Wang,
  • Sumei Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants11070936
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. 936

Abstract

Read online

Plant-specific TCP transcription factors play a key role in plant development and stress responses. Chrysanthemum nankingense shows higher cold tolerance than its ornamental polyploid counterpart. However, whether the TCP gene family plays a role in conferring cold tolerance upon C. nankingense remains unknown. Here, we identified 23 CnTCP genes in C. nankingense, systematically analyzed their phylogenetic relationships and synteny with TCPs from other species, and evaluated their expression profiles at low temperature. Phylogenetic analysis of the protein sequences suggested that CnTCP proteins fall into two classes and three clades, with a typical bHLH domain. However, differences between C. nankingense and Arabidopsis in predicted protein structure and binding sites suggested a unique function of CnTCPs in C. nankingense. Furthermore, expression profiles showed that expression of most CnTCPs were downregulated under cold conditions, suggesting their importance in plant responses to cold stress. Notably, expression of miR319 and of its predicted target genes, CnTCP2/4/14, led to fast responses to cold. Overexpression of Arabidopsis CnTCP4 led to hypersensitivity to cold, suggesting that CnTCP4 might play a negative role in C. nankingense responses to cold stress. Our results provide a foundation for future functional genomic studies on this gene family in chrysanthemum.

Keywords