Metabolic engineering of the chloroplast genome reveals that the yeast ArDH gene confers enhanced tolerance to salinity and drought in plants

Osmoprotectants stabilize proteins and membranes against the denaturing effect of high concentrations of salts and other harmful solutes. In yeast, arabitol dehydrogenase (ArDH) reduces D-ribulose to D-arabitol where D-ribulose is derived by dephosphorylating D-ribulose-5-PO4 in the oxidized pentose...

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Main Authors: Muhammad Sarwar Khan, Benish - Kanwal, Shahid - Nazir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2015.00725/full
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spelling doaj-8c9c66f4358e4474bddda9bf8b2192a72020-11-24T23:17:48ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2015-09-01610.3389/fpls.2015.00725156897Metabolic engineering of the chloroplast genome reveals that the yeast ArDH gene confers enhanced tolerance to salinity and drought in plantsMuhammad Sarwar Khan0Benish - Kanwal1Shahid - Nazir2University of AgricultureUniversity of AgricultureUniversity of AgricultureOsmoprotectants stabilize proteins and membranes against the denaturing effect of high concentrations of salts and other harmful solutes. In yeast, arabitol dehydrogenase (ArDH) reduces D-ribulose to D-arabitol where D-ribulose is derived by dephosphorylating D-ribulose-5-PO4 in the oxidized pentose pathway. Osmotolerance in plants could be developed through metabolic engineering of chloroplast genome by introducing genes encoding polyols. Here, we report that ArDH expression in chloroplasts confers tolerance to NaCl (up to 400 mM). Transgenic plants compared to wild type survived for four to five weeks on 400 mM NaCl. Nevertheless, plants remained green and grew normal on concentrations up to 350 mM NaCl. Further, a-week-old seedlings were also challenged with poly ethylene glycol (PEG, up to 6%) in the liquid medium, considering that membranes and proteins are protected under stress conditions due to accumulation of arabitol in chloroplasts. Seedlings were tolerant to 6% PEG, suggesting that ARDH enzyme maintains integrity of membranes in chloroplasts under drought conditions via metabolic engineering. Hence, the gene could be expressed in agronomic plants to withstand abiotic stresses.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2015.00725/fullMetabolic Engineeringchloroplast transformationOsmoprotectantsarabitol dehydrogenasesalt and draught tolerance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muhammad Sarwar Khan
Benish - Kanwal
Shahid - Nazir
spellingShingle Muhammad Sarwar Khan
Benish - Kanwal
Shahid - Nazir
Metabolic engineering of the chloroplast genome reveals that the yeast ArDH gene confers enhanced tolerance to salinity and drought in plants
Frontiers in Plant Science
Metabolic Engineering
chloroplast transformation
Osmoprotectants
arabitol dehydrogenase
salt and draught tolerance
author_facet Muhammad Sarwar Khan
Benish - Kanwal
Shahid - Nazir
author_sort Muhammad Sarwar Khan
title Metabolic engineering of the chloroplast genome reveals that the yeast ArDH gene confers enhanced tolerance to salinity and drought in plants
title_short Metabolic engineering of the chloroplast genome reveals that the yeast ArDH gene confers enhanced tolerance to salinity and drought in plants
title_full Metabolic engineering of the chloroplast genome reveals that the yeast ArDH gene confers enhanced tolerance to salinity and drought in plants
title_fullStr Metabolic engineering of the chloroplast genome reveals that the yeast ArDH gene confers enhanced tolerance to salinity and drought in plants
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic engineering of the chloroplast genome reveals that the yeast ArDH gene confers enhanced tolerance to salinity and drought in plants
title_sort metabolic engineering of the chloroplast genome reveals that the yeast ardh gene confers enhanced tolerance to salinity and drought in plants
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2015-09-01
description Osmoprotectants stabilize proteins and membranes against the denaturing effect of high concentrations of salts and other harmful solutes. In yeast, arabitol dehydrogenase (ArDH) reduces D-ribulose to D-arabitol where D-ribulose is derived by dephosphorylating D-ribulose-5-PO4 in the oxidized pentose pathway. Osmotolerance in plants could be developed through metabolic engineering of chloroplast genome by introducing genes encoding polyols. Here, we report that ArDH expression in chloroplasts confers tolerance to NaCl (up to 400 mM). Transgenic plants compared to wild type survived for four to five weeks on 400 mM NaCl. Nevertheless, plants remained green and grew normal on concentrations up to 350 mM NaCl. Further, a-week-old seedlings were also challenged with poly ethylene glycol (PEG, up to 6%) in the liquid medium, considering that membranes and proteins are protected under stress conditions due to accumulation of arabitol in chloroplasts. Seedlings were tolerant to 6% PEG, suggesting that ARDH enzyme maintains integrity of membranes in chloroplasts under drought conditions via metabolic engineering. Hence, the gene could be expressed in agronomic plants to withstand abiotic stresses.
topic Metabolic Engineering
chloroplast transformation
Osmoprotectants
arabitol dehydrogenase
salt and draught tolerance
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2015.00725/full
work_keys_str_mv AT muhammadsarwarkhan metabolicengineeringofthechloroplastgenomerevealsthattheyeastardhgeneconfersenhancedtolerancetosalinityanddroughtinplants
AT benishkanwal metabolicengineeringofthechloroplastgenomerevealsthattheyeastardhgeneconfersenhancedtolerancetosalinityanddroughtinplants
AT shahidnazir metabolicengineeringofthechloroplastgenomerevealsthattheyeastardhgeneconfersenhancedtolerancetosalinityanddroughtinplants
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