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Unraveling vascular development-related genes in laticifer-containing tissue of rubber tree by high-throughput transcriptome sequencing
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Document Title
Unraveling vascular development-related genes in laticifer-containing tissue of rubber tree by high-throughput transcriptome sequencing
Author
Sae-Lim P., Naktang C., Yoocha T., Nirapathpongporn K., Viboonjun U., Kongsawadworakul P., Tangphatsornruang S., Narangajavana J.
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
Department of Biotechnology, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, Bangkok, 10400, Thailand; Center of Excellence on Agricultural Biotechnology (AG-BIO/PERDO-CHE), Bangkok, 10900, Thailand; Rubber Research Institute of Thailand (RRIT), Bangkok, 10900, Thailand; Department of Plant Science, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, Bangkok, 10400, Thailand; National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (BIOTEC), National Science and Technology Development Agency, Pathum Thani, 12120, Thailand
Type
Article
Source Title
Current Plant Biology
ISSN
22146628
Year
2019
Volume
19
Open Access
Gold
Publisher
Elsevier B.V.
DOI
10.1016/j.cpb.2019.100112
Abstract
About 90% of natural rubber is obtained from tapping of the rubber tree (Hevea brasiliensis) for latex, which is circulated in the laticifers. Nowadays, the world supply of natural rubber is not sufficient for global demand, thus the increased latex yield was significantly underlined. In addition, the demand for wood (as a xylem part) from rubber tree was also increased as renewable resource for various applications. Laticifers are found in the secondary phloem containing tissue of rubber tree trunk-inner soft bark. The number of laticifers varies in consistent with latex yield and in responses to jasmonic acid level. This present study was committed to comparative transcriptome analysis in laticifers containing mature phloem, mature xylem and newly developed stem tissues of high latex-yield clone (RRIT251, with more laticifers) and high wood-yield clone (RRIT402, with less laticifers) of rubber tree to classify the genes and pathways involved with phloem (with laticifers) and xylem cell differentiation. There were 49, 54, 46 and 50 of vascular development-related genes in primary and secondary tissues of phloem and xylem, respectively. Differentially expressed genes in jasmonic acid signaling pathway was established with their highest expression in phloem tissue with laticifer cells of RRIT251, while genes in auxin signaling and secondary cell wall biosynthetic pathways were up-regulated in xylem tissue of RRIT402 for high wood yield. Promoter analysis of candidate-differentially expressed genes suggested the related pathway and putative regulatory elements for gene regulation. This genome-wide exploration of vascular development-related genes unraveled a largely unknown gap of this special vascular development containing laticifers in rubber tree. © 2019
Keyword
Laticifers | Phloem | Rubber tree | Transcriptome | Vascular development-related genes | Xylem
Industrial Classification
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 1
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 2
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 3
Funding Sponsor
Faculty of Science, Mahidol University
License
CC BY-NC-ND
Rights
Elsevier B.V.
Publication Source
Scopus
Note
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