- Turkish Journal of Botany
- Vol: 44 Issue: 4
- Enhanced stress tolerance in transformed Ajuga bracteosa Wall. ex Benth. regenerants by upregulated ...
Enhanced stress tolerance in transformed Ajuga bracteosa Wall. ex Benth. regenerants by upregulated gene expression of metabolic pathways
Authors : Samına Rubnawaz, Waqas Kayani, Rashıd Mahmood, Bushra Mirza
Pages : 410-426
Doi:10.3906/bot-2002-13
View : 18 | Download : 0
Publication Date : 9999-12-31
Article Type : Makaleler
Abstract :The rol oncogenes of Agrobacterium rhizogenes enhance the production of medicinally important compounds in plants and provide a first barrier against the overproduction of reactive oxygen species during biotic and abiotic stress. This study was designed to evaluate the expression of genes involved in biosynthetic pathways and their impact on metabolic contents and environmental stress tolerance in regenerated Ajuga bracteosa Wall. ex Benth. After successful transformation, real-time quantitative PCR confirmed the increased expression 1.94-6.59-fold of HMGR, HDS, FDS, PAL, and TTG1 genes in transgenic lines. Furthermore, GC-MS coupled with principal component analysis revealed diverse concentrations of 97 metabolites in A. bracteosa. Transgenic lines showed greater survival under multiple stresses. This was revealed by significant chlorophyll content 8.13-21 µmoles/m2 , higher quantum efficiency of PSII Fv/Fm , and the performance index PIabs value. Similarly, catalase and peroxidase enzyme activities were enhanced during extreme drought 300-400 mM mannitol and salinity 150-200 mM NaCl conditions, compared to untransformed control. Wild type control plant leaves were completely necrotized by Aspergillus fumigatus FCBP 66 and Fusarium solani FCBP 0291 , whereas transformed leaves had improved antifungal resistance. In conclusion, our data suggest that rolABC genes have a significant impact on the synthesis of metabolites involved in enhancing multistress tolerance in A.bracteosa.Keywords : Ajuga bracteosa, rolABC, real-time quantitative PCR, GC-MS, principal component analysis, biotic and abiotic stress