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27
result(s) for
"Oryza australiensis"
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Heat tolerance in a wild Oryza species is attributed to maintenance of Rubisco activation by a thermally stable Rubisco activase ortholog
by
Michael E. Salvucci
,
Brian J. Atwell
,
Alexander Gallé
in
Adenosine Triphosphate - metabolism
,
Amino Acid Sequence
,
amino acid sequences
2016
The mechanistic basis of tolerance to heat stress was investigated in Oryza sativa and two wild rice species, Oryza meridionalis and Oryza australiensis. The wild relatives are endemic to the hot, arid Australian savannah.
Leaf elongation rates and gas exchange were measured during short periods of supraoptimal heat, revealing species differences. The Rubisco activase (RCA) gene from each species was sequenced. Using expressed recombinant RCA and leaf-extracted RCA, the kinetic properties of the two isoforms were studied under high temperatures.
Leaf elongation was undiminished at 45°C in O. australiensis. The net photosynthetic rate was almost 50% slower in O. sativa at 45°C than at 28°C, while in O. australiensis it was unaffected. Oryza meridionalis exhibited intermediate heat tolerance. Based on previous reports that RCA is heat-labile, the Rubisco activation state was measured. It correlated positively with leaf elongation rates across all three species and four periods of exposure to 45°C. Sequence analysis revealed numerous polymorphisms in the RCA amino acid sequence from O. australiensis. The O. australiensis RCA enzyme was thermally stable up to 42°C, contrasting with RCA from O. sativa, which was inhibited at 36°C.
We attribute heat tolerance in the wild species to thermal stability of RCA, enabling Rubisco to remain active.
Journal Article
Map-based Cloning and Characterization of the BPH18 Gene from Wild Rice Conferring Resistance to Brown Planthopper (BPH) Insect Pest
2016
Brown planthopper (BPH) is a phloem sap-sucking insect pest of rice which causes severe yield loss. We cloned the
BPH18
gene from the BPH-resistant introgression line derived from the wild rice species
Oryza australiensis
. Map-based cloning and complementation test revealed that the
BPH18
encodes CC-NBS-NBS-LRR protein. BPH18 has two NBS domains, unlike the typical NBS-LRR proteins. The
BPH18
promoter::
GUS
transgenic plants exhibited strong GUS expression in the vascular bundles of the leaf sheath, especially in phloem cells where the BPH attacks. The BPH18 proteins were widely localized to the endo-membranes in a cell, including the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus,
trans
-Golgi network, and prevacuolar compartments, suggesting that BPH18 may recognize the BPH invasion at endo-membranes in phloem cells. Whole genome sequencing of the near-isogenic lines (NILs), NIL-
BPH18
and NIL-
BPH26
, revealed that
BPH18
located at the same locus of
BPH26
. However, these two genes have remarkable sequence differences and the independent NILs showed differential BPH resistance with different expression patterns of plant defense-related genes, indicating that
BPH18
and
BPH26
are functionally different alleles. These findings would facilitate elucidation of the molecular mechanism of BPH resistance and the identified novel alleles to fast track breeding BPH resistant rice cultivars.
Journal Article
Rapid Accumulation of Proline Enhances Salinity Tolerance in Australian Wild Rice Oryza australiensis Domin
by
Das Bhowmik, Sudipta
,
Long, Hao
,
Hoang, Linh Thi My
in
Accumulation
,
Biosynthesis
,
Cell membranes
2021
Proline has been reported to play an important role in helping plants cope with several stresses, including salinity. This study investigates the relationship between proline accumulation and salt tolerance in an accession of Australian wild rice Oryza australiensis Domin using morphological, physiological, and molecular assessments. Seedlings of O. australiensis wild rice accession JC 2304 and two other cultivated rice Oryza sativa L. cultivars, Nipponbare (salt-sensitive), and Pokkali (salt-tolerant), were screened at 150 mM NaCl for 14 days. The results showed that O. australiensis was able to rapidly accumulate free proline and lower osmotic potential at a very early stage of salt stress compared to cultivated rice. The qRT-PCR result revealed that O. australiensis wild rice JC 2304 activated proline synthesis genes OsP5CS1, OsP5CS2, and OsP5CR and depressed the expression of proline degradation gene OsProDH as early as 1 h after exposure to salinity stress. Wild rice O. australiensis and Pokkali maintained their relative water content and cell membrane integrity during exposure to salinity stress, while the salt-sensitive Nipponbare failed to do so. An analysis of the sodium and potassium contents suggested that O. australiensis wild rice JC 2304 adapted to ionic stress caused by salinity by maintaining a low Na+ content and low Na+/K+ ratio in the shoots and roots. This demonstrates that O. australiensis wild rice may use a rapid accumulation of free proline as a strategy to cope with salinity stress.
Journal Article
Wild and Cultivated Species of Rice Have Distinctive Proteomic Responses to Drought
by
Masoomi-Aladizgeh, Farhad
,
Johnsen, Matthew M.
,
Haynes, Paul A.
in
Abiotic stress
,
Agricultural production
,
Biomarkers
2020
Drought often compromises yield in non-irrigated crops such as rainfed rice, imperiling the communities that depend upon it as a primary food source. In this study, two cultivated species (Oryza sativa cv. Nipponbare and Oryza glaberrima cv. CG14) and an endemic, perennial Australian wild species (Oryza australiensis) were grown in soil at 40% field capacity for 7 d (drought). The hypothesis was that the natural tolerance of O. australiensis to erratic water supply would be reflected in a unique proteomic profile. Leaves from droughted plants and well-watered controls were harvested for label-free quantitative shotgun proteomics. Physiological and gene ontology analysis confirmed that O. australiensis responded uniquely to drought, with superior leaf water status and enhanced levels of photosynthetic proteins. Distinctive patterns of protein accumulation in drought were observed across the O. australiensis proteome. Photosynthetic and stress-response proteins were more abundant in drought-affected O. glaberrima than O. sativa, and were further enriched in O. australiensis. In contrast, the level of accumulation of photosynthetic proteins decreased when O. sativa underwent drought, while a narrower range of stress-responsive proteins showed increased levels of accumulation. Distinctive proteomic profiles and the accumulated levels of individual proteins with specific functions in response to drought in O. australiensis indicate the importance of this species as a source of stress tolerance genes.
Journal Article
Tandemly duplicated Rubisco activase genes of cereals show differential evolution and response to heat stress
by
Nagarajan, Ragupathi
,
Mohan, Amita
,
Kahlon, Kaviraj Singh
in
Alternative splicing
,
Biochemistry
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2025
Heat stress affects various components of photosynthetic machinery of which Rubisco activation inhibition due to heat sensitive Rubisco activase (RCA) is the most prominent. Detailed comparison of RCA coding genes identified a tandem duplication event in the grass family lineage where the duplicated genes showed very different evolutionary pattern. One of the two genes showed high level of sequence conservation whereas the second copy, although present only 1.5 kb away, was highly variable among various plant species because of loss of introns, alternative splicing and loss of the last exon coding redox regulated C-terminal extension domain. Gene specific expression analysis, both at the transcription as well as the protein level, showed very different expression pattern of the two RCA copies. Expression of the highly conserved copy was higher under normal plant growing conditions that decreased many folds under heat stress with substantial genotypic variation, but the variable copy showed much higher expression under heat stress conditions across all grass species. The cultivated rice has only one functional gene as the second copy became nonfunctional due to multiple deletions but
Oryza brachyantha
and
Oryza australiensis
still have two functional
Rca
genes. Detailed analysis of the promoter region of the two copies among various plant species showed insertion of several transposable elements harboring heat responsive elements in the heat inducible copy of the gene. The conserved RCA copy of wheat didn’t have any transposable insertions whereas in that of maize has one heat shock element and sorghum had two. It would be interesting to study if the higher level of heat stress tolerance observed in sorghum and maize is associated with the differences observed for RCA. Key message This manuscript is reporting a grass family-specific tandem duplication event in RCA genes of cereals. The duplicated copies underwent neo-functionalization to evolve novel function to deal with heat stress. One copy of the tandem duplication maintained a high level of conservation whereas the second copy showed tremendous divergence to evolve species specific function of the gene. Specific function to respond to heat stress likely evolved via the insertion of various heat responsive elements carried by transposable elements.
Key message
This manuscript is reporting a grass family-specific tandem duplication event in RCA genes of cereals. The duplicated copies underwent neo-functionalization to evolve novel function to deal with heat stress. One copy of the tandem duplication maintained a high level of conservation whereas the second copy showed tremendous divergence to evolve species specific function of the gene. Specific function to respond to heat stress likely evolved via the insertion of various heat responsive elements carried by transposable elements.
Journal Article
Three geographically separate domestications of Asian rice
2015
Domesticated rice (
Oryza sativa
L.) accompanied the dawn of Asian civilization
1
and has become one of world's staple crops. From archaeological and genetic evidence various contradictory scenarios for the origin of different varieties of cultivated rice have been proposed, the most recent based on a single domestication
2,3
. By examining the footprints of selection in the genomes of different cultivated rice types, we show that there were three independent domestications in different parts of Asia. We identify wild populations in southern China and the Yangtze valley as the source of the
japonica
gene pool, and populations in Indochina and the Brahmaputra valley as the source of the
indica
gene pool. We reveal a hitherto unrecognized origin for the
aus
variety in central India or Bangladesh. We also conclude that
aromatic
rice is a result of a hybridization between
japonica
and
aus
, and that the tropical and temperate versions of
japonica
are later adaptations of one crop. Our conclusions are in accord with archaeological evidence that suggests widespread origins of rice cultivation
1,4
. We therefore anticipate that our results will stimulate a more productive collaboration between genetic and archaeological studies of rice domestication, and guide utilization of genetic resources in breeding programmes aimed at crop improvement.
The model and geographic location(s) of Asian rice domestication has been a controversial topic. Now a reanalysis of a previously published large genomic dataset, supports three geographically separate domestications of Asian rice.
Journal Article
Photosynthetic traits of Australian wild rice (Oryza australiensis) confer tolerance to extreme daytime temperatures
by
Scafaro, Andrew P
,
Atwell, Brian J
,
Phillips, Aaron L
in
Agricultural production
,
Biomass
,
Carbon
2022
Key messageA wild relative of rice from the Australian savannah was compared with cultivated rice, revealing thermotolerance in growth and photosynthetic processes and a more robust carbon economy in extreme heat.Above ~ 32 °C, impaired photosynthesis compromises the productivity of rice. We compared leaf tissues from heat-tolerant wild rice (Oryza australiensis) with temperate-adapted O. sativa after sustained exposure to heat, as well as diurnal heat shock. Leaf elongation and shoot biomass in O. australiensis were unimpaired at 45 °C, and soluble sugar concentrations trebled during 10 h of a 45 °C shock treatment. By contrast, 45 °C slowed growth strongly in O. sativa. Chloroplastic CO2 concentrations eliminated CO2 supply to chloroplasts as the basis of differential heat tolerance. This directed our attention to carboxylation and the abundance of the heat-sensitive chaperone Rubisco activase (Rca) in each species. Surprisingly, O. australiensis leaves at 45 °C had 50% less Rca per unit Rubisco, even though CO2 assimilation was faster than at 30 °C. By contrast, Rca per unit Rubisco doubled in O. sativa at 45 °C while CO2 assimilation was slower, reflecting its inferior Rca thermostability. Plants grown at 45 °C were simultaneously exposed to 700 ppm CO2 to enhance the CO2 supply to Rubisco. Growth at 45 °C responded to CO2 enrichment in O. australiensis but not O. sativa, reflecting more robust carboxylation capacity and thermal tolerance in the wild rice relative.
Journal Article
A Thermotolerant Variant of Rubisco Activase From a Wild Relative Improves Growth and Seed Yield in Rice Under Heat Stress
by
Muylaert, Steven
,
Gallé, Alexander
,
Scafaro, Andrew P.
in
Agricultural production
,
Carbohydrates
,
Carbon dioxide
2018
Genes encoding thermostable variants of the photosynthesis heat-labile protein Rubisco activase (Rca) from a wild relative
were overexpressed in domesticated rice (
). Proteomics was used to quantify the abundance of
Rca (Rca-
) in the resulting plants. Plants were grown to maturity in growth rooms and from early tillering until immediately prior to anthesis, they were exposed to daytime maximum temperatures of 28, 40, and 45°C and constant night temperatures of 22°C. Non-destructive measurements of leaf elongation and photosynthesis were used to compare the
segregant with a transfected line in which 19% of its total Rca content was the recombinant
Rca (T-
-19). Height, fresh mass, panicle number, seed set, and seed number were measured at final harvest. Traits at maturity after heat stress at 45°C correlated strongly with recombinant protein abundance. Seed number was far the most responsive trait to an increase in Rca-
abundance, improving by up to 150%. Leaf elongation rates (
) and tiller number were significantly greater in the transformed plants in the first two weeks of exposure to 45°C but tiller numbers later became equal in the two genotypes. Gas exchange measurements showed that T-
-19 had faster light induction of photosynthesis but not significantly higher CO
assimilation rates, indicating that the carbon gain that resulted in large yield improvement after growth at 45°C was not strongly correlated with an instantaneous measurement of steady-state photosynthesis. When plants were grown at 40°C daytime maximum, there was no improvement in the final biomass, panicle or seed number when compared with 28°C, indicating that the threshold for heat damage and beneficial effects of the thermostable Rca recombinant protein was between 40 and 45°C, which corresponded to leaf temperatures in the range 38-42°C. The results suggest that the thermotolerant form of Rca from
was sufficient to enhance carbohydrate accumulation and storage by rice over the life of the plant, dramatically improving yields after exposure to heat throughout the vegetative phase.
Journal Article
The first long-read nuclear genome assembly of Oryza australiensis, a wild rice from northern Australia
2022
Oryza australiensis
is a wild rice native to monsoonal northern Australia. The International
Oryza
Map Alignment Project emphasises its significance as the sole representative of the EE genome clade. Assembly of the
O. australiensis
genome has previously been challenging due to its high Long Terminal Repeat (LTR) retrotransposon (RT) content. Oxford Nanopore long reads were combined with Illumina short reads to generate a high-quality ~ 858 Mbp genome assembly within 850 contigs with 46× long read coverage. Reference-guided scaffolding increased genome contiguity, placing 88.2% of contigs into 12 pseudomolecules. After alignment to the
Oryza sativa
cv. Nipponbare genome, we observed several structural variations. PacBio Iso-Seq data were generated for five distinct tissues to improve the functional annotation of 34,587 protein-coding genes and 42,329 transcripts. We also report SNV numbers for three additional
O. australiensis
genotypes based on Illumina re-sequencing. Although genetic similarity reflected geographical separation, the density of SNVs also correlated with our previous report on variations in salinity tolerance. This genome re-confirms the genetic remoteness of the
O. australiensis
lineage within the
O. officinalis
genome complex. Assembly of a high-quality genome for
O. australiensis
provides an important resource for the discovery of critical genes involved in development and stress tolerance.
Journal Article
Are Differences in Genomic Data Sets due to True Biological Variants or Errors in Genome Assembly: An Example from Two Chloroplast Genomes
2015
DNA sequencing has been revolutionized by the development of high-throughput sequencing technologies. Plummeting costs and the massive throughput capacities of second and third generation sequencing platforms have transformed many fields of biological research. Concurrently, new data processing pipelines made rapid de novo genome assemblies possible. However, high quality data are critically important for all investigations in the genomic era. We used chloroplast genomes of one Oryza species (O. australiensis) to compare differences in sequence quality: one genome (GU592209) was obtained through Illumina sequencing and reference-guided assembly and the other genome (KJ830774) was obtained via target enrichment libraries and shotgun sequencing. Based on the whole genome alignment, GU592209 was more similar to the reference genome (O. sativa: AY522330) with 99.2% sequence identity (SI value) compared with the 98.8% SI values in the KJ830774 genome; whereas the opposite result was obtained when the SI values in coding and noncoding regions of GU592209 and KJ830774 were compared. Additionally, the junctions of two single copies and repeat copies in the chloroplast genome exhibited differences. Phylogenetic analyses were conducted using these sequences, and the different data sets yielded dissimilar topologies: phylogenetic replacements of the two individuals were remarkably different based on whole genome sequencing or SNP data and insertions and deletions (indels) data. Thus, we concluded that the genomic composition of GU592209 was heterogeneous in coding and non-coding regions. These findings should impel biologists to carefully consider the quality of sequencing and assembly when working with next-generation data.
Journal Article