International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Mar 2022)

Characterization of the Wheat Heat Shock Factor TaHsfA2e-5D Conferring Heat and Drought Tolerance in <i>Arabidopsis</i>

  • Huihui Bi,
  • Jingnan Miao,
  • Jinqiu He,
  • Qifan Chen,
  • Jiajun Qian,
  • Huanhuan Li,
  • Yan Xu,
  • Dan Ma,
  • Yue Zhao,
  • Xuejun Tian,
  • Wenxuan Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23052784
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 5
p. 2784

Abstract

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Environmental stresses, especially heat and drought, severely limit plant growth and negatively affect wheat yield and quality worldwide. Heat shock factors (Hsfs) play a central role in regulating plant responses to various stresses. In this study, the wheat heat shock factor gene TaHsfA2e-5D on chromosome 5D was isolated and functionally characterized, with the goal of investigating its role in responses to heat and drought stresses. Gene expression profiling showed that TaHsfA2e-5D was expressed constitutively in various wheat tissues, most highly in roots at the reproductive stage. The expression of TaHsfA2e-5D was highly up-regulated in wheat seedlings by heat, cold, drought, high salinity, and multiple phytohormones. The TaHsfA2e-5D protein was localized in the nucleus and showed a transcriptional activation activity. Ectopic expression of the TaHsfA2e-5D in yeast exhibited improved thermotolerance. Overexpression of the TaHsfA2e-5D in Arabidopsis results in enhanced tolerance to heat and drought stresses. Furthermore, RT-qPCR analyses revealed that TaHsfA2e-5D functions through increasing the expression of Hsp genes and other stress-related genes, including APX2 and GolS1. Collectively, these results suggest that TaHsfA2e-5D functions as a positive regulator of plants’ responses to heat and drought stresses, which may be of great significance for understanding and improving environmental stress tolerance in crops.

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