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A synthetic cytokinin improves photosynthesis in rice under drought stress by modulating the abundance of proteins related to stomatal conductance, chlorophyll contents, and rubisco activity
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Metadata
Document Title
A synthetic cytokinin improves photosynthesis in rice under drought stress by modulating the abundance of proteins related to stomatal conductance, chlorophyll contents, and rubisco activity
Author
Gujjar R.S., Banyen P., Chuekong W., Worakan P., Roytrakul S., Supaibulwatana K.
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, Rama VI Rd., Ratchathewi, Bangkok, 10400, Thailand; Division of Crop Improvement, Indian Institute of Sugarcane Research, Lucknow, 226002, India; National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, National Science and Technology Development AgencyPathum Thani 12120, Thailand
Type
Article
Source Title
Plants
ISSN
22237747
Year
2020
Volume
9
Issue
9
Page
Jan-21
Open Access
Gold, Green
Publisher
MDPI AG
DOI
10.3390/plants9091106
Abstract
Drought susceptible rice cultivar PTT1 (Pathumthani1) was treated with drought (−72 kPa) and CPPU (N-2-(chloro-4-pyridyl)-N-phenyl urea) @ 5 mg/L at tillering and grain-filling stages. Plants were tested for the effect of synthetic cytokinin on the parameters influencing the process of photosynthesis. Exogenous spray of CPPU improved the stomatal conductance of rice leaves, which was severely reduced by drought. The abundance intensities of proteins, associated with the stomatal conductance (ZEP, NCED4, PYL9, PYL10, ABI5, SnRK4, Phot1, and Phot2), were also in agreement with the positive impact of CPPU on the stomatal conductance under drought stress. Among the photosynthetic pigments, Chl b contents were significantly reduced by drought stress, whereas CPPU treated plants retained the normal contents of Chl b under drought stress. Subsequently, we examined the abundance intensities of chlorophyll synthase and HCR proteins, implicated in the biosynthesis of chlorophyll pigments and the conversion of Chl b to Chl a, respectively. The results indicated a drought-mediated suppression of chlorophyll synthase. However, CPPU treated plants retained normal levels of chlorophyll synthase under drought stress. In addition, drought stress induced HCR proteins, which might be the cause for reduced Chl b contents in drought stressed plants. Further, CPPU treatment helped the plants sustain photosynthesis at a normal rate under drought stress, which was comparable with well-watered plants. The results were further confirmed by examining the abundance intensities of two key proteins, RAF1 and Rubisco activase, implicated in the assembly and activation of Rubisco, respectively. CPPU treatment reversed the drought mediated suppression of these proteins at both of the growth stages of rice under drought stress. Based on the results, it can be suggested that synthetic cytokinins help the plants sustain photosynthesis at a normal rate under drought stress by positively influencing the determinants of photosynthesis at a molecular level. © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
Keyword
Cytokinin | Drought | Photosynthesis | Proteome | Rice
Industrial Classification
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 1
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 2
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 3
Funding Sponsor
National Research Council of Thailand
License
CC BY
Rights
Author
Publication Source
Scopus