Genome-Wide Transcriptome Profiling, Characterization, and Functional Identification of <i>NAC</i> Transcription Factors in Sorghum under Salt Stress

Salinity stress has become a significant concern to global food security. Revealing the mechanisms that enable plants to survive under salinity has immense significance. Sorghum has increasingly attracted researchers interested in understanding the survival and adaptation strategies to high salinity...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Himani Punia, Jayanti Tokas, Anurag Malik, Sonali Sangwan, Anju Rani, Shikha Yashveer, Saleh Alansi, Maha J. Hashim, Mohamed A. El-Sheikh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-10-01
Series:Antioxidants
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3921/10/10/1605
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Summary:Salinity stress has become a significant concern to global food security. Revealing the mechanisms that enable plants to survive under salinity has immense significance. Sorghum has increasingly attracted researchers interested in understanding the survival and adaptation strategies to high salinity. However, systematic analysis of the DEGs (differentially expressed genes) and their relative expression has not been reported in sorghum under salt stress. The de novo transcriptomic analysis of sorghum under different salinity levels from 60 to 120 mM NaCl was generated using Illumina HiSeq. Approximately 323.49 million high-quality reads, with an average contig length of 1145 bp, were assembled de novo. On average, 62% of unigenes were functionally annotated to known proteins. These DEGs were mainly involved in several important metabolic processes, such as carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, cell wall biogenesis, photosynthesis, and hormone signaling. SSG 59-3 alleviated the adverse effects of salinity by suppressing oxidative stress (H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>) and stimulating enzymatic and non-enzymatic antioxidant activities (SOD, APX, CAT, APX, POX, GR, GSH, ASC, proline, and GB), as well as protecting cell membrane integrity (MDA and electrolyte leakage). Significant up-regulation of transcripts encoding the <i>NAC</i>, <i>MYB</i>, and <i>WRYK</i> families, <i>NHX</i> transporters, the aquaporin protein family, photosynthetic genes, antioxidants, and compatible osmolyte proteins were observed. The tolerant line (SSG 59-3) engaged highly efficient machinery in response to elevated salinity, especially during the transport and influx of K<sup>+</sup> ions, signal transduction, and osmotic homeostasis. Our data provide insights into the evolution of the <i>NAC</i> TFs gene family and further support the hypothesis that these genes are essential for plant responses to salinity. The findings may provide a molecular foundation for further exploring the potential functions of <i>NAC</i> TFs in developing salt-resistant sorghum lines.
ISSN:2076-3921