Biologia Plantarum (Sep 2017)

Improving tobacco freezing tolerance by co-transfer of stress-inducible CbCBF and CbICE53 genes

  • P. Lin,
  • C. Shen,
  • H. Chen,
  • X. H. Yao,
  • J. Lin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10535-016-0687-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 61, no. 3
pp. 520 – 528

Abstract

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Cold stress is one of the major limitations to crop productivity worldwide. We investigated the effects of multiple gene expression from cold tolerant Capsella bursa-pastoris in transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabaccum) plants. We combined CblCE53 and CbCBF into a reconstruct vector by isocaudomers. Plant overexpression of CbICE53 under the stress inducible CbCOR15b promoter and CbCBF under a constitutive promoter showed increased tolerance to both chilling and freezing temperatures in comparison to wild-type plants, according to the electrolyte leakage and relative water content. The expressions of endogenous cold-responsive genes in transgenic tobacco (NtDREB1, NtDREB3, NtERD10a and NtERD10b) were obviously upregulated under normal and low temperature conditions. These results suggest that the CbICE53 + CbCBF transgenic plants showed a much greater cold tolerance as well as no dwarfism and delayed flowering. Thus they can be considered as a potential candidate for transgenic engineering for cold tolerant tobacco.

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