Skip to content
Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter June 2, 2014

Water Stress Enhances Expression of Genes Encoding Plastid Terminal Oxidase and Key Components of Chlororespiration and Alternative Respiration in Soybean Seedlings

  • Xin Sun EMAIL logo , Cui-Qin Yang , Tao Wen , Fu-Chun Zeng , Qiang Wang , Wen-Yu Yang and Hong-Hui Lin

Plastid terminal oxidase (PTOX) is a plastid-localized plastoquinone (PQ) oxidase in plants. It functions as the terminal oxidase of chlororespiration, and has the potential ability to regulate the redox state of the PQ pool. Expression of the PTOX gene was up-regulated in soybean seedlings after exposure to water deficit stress for 6 h. Concomitantly expression of the NDH-H gene, encoding a component of the NADPH dehydrogenase (NDH) complex which is a key component of both chlororespiration and NDH-dependent cyclic electron transfer (CET), was also up-regulated. Transcript levels of the proton gradient regulation (PGR5) gene, which encodes an essential component of the PGR5-dependent CET, were not affected by water stress, while the expression of the alternative oxidase (AOX1) gene, which encodes a terminal oxidase of alternative respiration in mitochondria, was also up-regulated under water stress. Therefore, our results indicate that water stress induced the up-regulation of genes encoding key components of chlororespiration and alternative respiration. Transcript levels of the AOX1 gene began to increase in response to water stress before those of PTOX suggesting that alternative respiration may react faster to water stress than chlororespiration.

Received: 2013-11-19
Revised: 2014-3-9
Published Online: 2014-6-2
Published in Print: 2014-8-1

© 1946 – 2014: Verlag der Zeitschrift für Naturforschung

Downloaded on 27.5.2024 from https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.5560/znc.2013-0181/html
Scroll to top button