-
All reported functional WRKY genes are summarized in Table 1. The majority of genes were from Arabidopsis, rice, and soybean, with 27, 16, and nine, respectively. Seven WRKY genes were identified in wheat and six WRKY genes were identified in land cotton, whereas only one functional WRKY gene was reported in Pyrus, Chrysanthemum, Tamarix, and Macrotyloma. Numerous functional studies of WRKY genes have mostly focused on model plants and crops, whereas reports on ornamentals, especially flowers and medicinal plants, are few.
Table 1. Reported functional WRKY genes summarized in this study.
Group Gene ID Species Function References III GhWRKY33 Gossypium hirsutum Tolerance to drought [58] III PbrWRKY53 Pyrus betulaefolia Tolerance to drought [38] II C GmWRKY54 Glycine max Tolerance to drought [59] II A GmWRKY27 Glycine max Tolerance to drought [58] III AtWRKY63 Arabidopsis thaliana Tolerance to drought [60] I TaWRKY2 and TaWRKY19 Triticum aestivum Tolerance to drought [61] II C OsWRKY11 Oryza sativa Tolerance to drought [57] III OsWRKY45 Oryza sativa Tolerance to drought [62] II A WRKY18, WRKY40 and WRKY60 Arabidopsis thaliana Tolerance to drought [63,64] I WRKY1 Arabidopsis thaliana Tolerance to drought [65] III WRKY46, WRKY54, and WRKY70 Arabidopsis thaliana Tolerance to drought [42] II C AtWRKY57 Arabidopsis thaliana Tolerance to drought [37] I A OsWRKY30 Oryza sativa Tolerance to drought [66] II OsWRKY80 Oryza sativa Tolerance to drought [67] III OsWRKY47 Oryza sativa Tolerance to drought [68] I FvWRKY42 Fragaria vesca Tolerance to drought [39] II D ZmWRKY58 Zea mays Tolerance to drought [41] II E ZmWRKY106 Zea mays Tolerance to drought [69] II A ZmWRKY40 Zea mays Tolerance to drought [69] II E CmWRKY10 Chrysanthemum morifolium Tolerance to drought [70] III and I TaWRKY1 and TaWRKY33 Triticum aestivum Tolerance to drought [71] II D ThWRKY4 Tamarix hispida Tolerance to drought [72] I MuWRKY3 Macrotyloma uniflorum Tolerance to drought [73] II D GhWRKY17 Gossypium hirsutum Tolerance to drought [34] III GhWRKY41 Gossypium hirsutum Tolerance to drought [74] I TaWRKY44 Triticum aestivum Tolerance to drought [75] III FcWRKY70 Fortunella crassifolia Tolerance to drought [40] II C GmWRKY12 Glycine max Tolerance to drought [76] III ZmWRKY79 Zea mays Tolerance to drought [77] II D GhWRKY21 Gossypium hirsutum Tolerance to drought [78] III SlWRKY81 Solanum lycopersicum Tolerance to drought [79] I SPF1 Ipomoea batatas Root development [43] I and II A ABF1 and ABF2 Avena fatua Seed germination [45] II B WRKY42 and WRKY6 Arabidopsis thaliana Plant nutrient [42] II C WRKY45 and WRKY75 III and II E WRKY74 and WRKY80 Oryza sativa Plant nutrient [42] III AtWRKY53 Arabidopsis thaliana Leaf senescense [46] II C OsWRKY11 Oryza sativa Floral development [41] II C AtWRKY12 and AtWRKY13 Arabidopsis thaliana Floral development [44] II C AtWRKY71 Arabidopsis thaliana Floral development [47] I AtWRKY2 Arabidopsis thaliana Reproductive development [80] I OsWRKY70 Oryza sativa Defense response [81] II C FvWRKY48 Fragaria vesca Pectin degradation [82] II E OsWRKY13 Oryza sativa Regulated ABA signaling and tolerance to salt [83] II C VlWRKY3 Vitis vinifera Response to Golovinomyces cichoracearum and tolerant to salt [84] II C GhWRKY68 Gossypium hirsutum Reduced salt tolerance and drought resistance [85] I GhWRKY25 Gossypium hirsutum Tolerance to salt [86] I VvWRKY24 Vitis vinifera Tolerance to cold [29] I AtWRKY25 and AtWRKY33 Arabidopsis thaliana Tolerance to heat [25] I AtWRKY34 Arabidopsis thaliana Negative regulator in cold stress [31] III AtWRKY53 Arabidopsis thaliana Reduced drought resistance [87] III AtWRKY63 Arabidopsis thaliana Regulated ABA signaling [60] III AtWRKY54 Arabidopsis thaliana Response to heat stress [28] II C OsWRKY72 Oryza sativa Sensitive to salt, sucrose, and ABA [88] III OsWRKY74 Oryza sativa Tolerance to cold and Pi deprivation [89] II A OsWRKY76 Oryza sativa Tolerance to cold [90] III OsWRKY89 Oryza sativa Tolerance to UV [91] II A GmWRKY17 Glycine max Reduced salt tolerance [34] III BcWRKY46 Brassica campestris Tolerance to salt [92] III BhWRKY1 Boea hygrometrica Tolerance to salt [93] III and I VpWRKY1 and VpWRKY2 Vitis pseudoreticulata Tolerance to salt and cold [94] II A VpWRKY3 Vitis pseudoreticulata Tolerance to salt [95] III TcWRKY53 Thlaspi caerulescens Negative regulator in osmotic stress [96] I NaWRKY3 Nicotiana attenuata Sensitive to mechanical damage [97] I and II D JrWRKY2 and JrWRKY7 Juglans regia Tolerance to drought and cold [98] III SbWRKY30 Sorghum bicolor Tolerance to salt and drought [99] II C SbWRKY50 Sorghum bicolor Tolerance to salt [100] II A MdWRKY30 Malus domestica Tolerance to salt and osmotic stress [101] II C GbWRKY1 Gossypium barbadense Tolerance to salt [35] I VbWRKY32 Verbena bonariensis Tolerance to cold [28] II C OsWRKY67 Oryza sativa Negative regulator of innate defense response [22] II A OsWRKY62.1 Oryza sativa Positive regulator of PTI and ETI against pathogens [12] III AtWRKY38 and AtWRKY62 Arabidopsis thaliana Response to bacterial pathogen [11] II A,II C, and II B GmWRKY136, GmWRKY53, and GmWRKY86 Glycine max Tolerance to SCN [23] II C and III TaWRKY49 and TaWRKY62 Triticum aestivum Tolerance to stripe rust [102] II A CaWRKY40b and CaWRKY40 Capsicum annuum Negative regulation of plant immunity [17,24] II B CaWRKY6 Capsicum annuum Tolerance to R. solanacearum [15] I SpWRKY1 Solanum pimpinellifolium Tolerance to Phytophthora infestans [16] II D ZmWRKY17 Zea mays Negative regulator of salt stress [103] II D GhWRKY39-1 Gossypium hirsutum Tolerance to salt [33] II C AtWRKY8 Arabidopsis thaliana Defense response [13] II E CaWRKY27 Capsicum annuum Response to Ralstonia solanacearum infection [14] II C AtWRKY48 Arabidopsis thaliana Tolerance to P. syringae [20] II E AtWRKY29 Arabidopsis thaliana Resistance to P. syringe [18] II C PoWRKY13 Populus Response to heat stress [26] tomentosa III SlWRKY33 Solanum lycopersicum Tolerance to cold [30] II D GmWRKY13 Glycine max Response to salt and mannitol [9] To analyze the branch specificity of the WRKY gene family that responded to stress, a phylogenetic tree was reconstructed from AtWRKY genes, OsWRKY genes, and all reported functional WRKY genes (Fig. 1). All reported functional WRKY proteins were divided into three groups—I, II, and III, with group II being further divided into five subgroups—II-a, II-b, II-c, II-d, and II-e. Most WRKY proteins were widely distributed in all these groups rather than concentrated in the same branch. However, OsWRKY67, SbWRKY50, GmWRKY21, AtWRKY8, and AtWRKY48 play important roles under stress and were clustered in a branch of group II-c. Similarly, as essential stress-related genes, WRKY80 and WRKY13 in rice, WRKY29 in Arabidopsis, CaWRKY27 in pepper, and ZmWRKY106 in maize clustered in one branch of group II-e. In addition, reported genes responding to abiotic stress, including ZmWRKY58, GhWRKY21, GhWRKY17, ThWRKY4, GmWRKY13, GhWRKY39-1, and JrWRKY7, were all located in group II-d.
Figure 1.
Phylogenetic analysis of WRKY family proteins in Arabidopsis, rice, and other reported species.
Therefore, because of these distribution features of reported functional WRKY genes, the identification of amino acid sequence patterns in response to stress focused on groups II-c, II-d, and II-e.
Identification of the pattern of stress-related WRKY genes
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To further characterize the stress-responsive WRKY proteins for identifying the amino acid patterns in different subgroups, the properties of all drought-resistant WRKY proteins (molecular weight, pI, instability index, etc.) were analyzed (Supplemental Table S1). The molecular weight of stress-related WRKY proteins ranged from 16801.82 to 74561.15, PI ranged from 4.86 to 9.96, and the instability index ranged from 37.86 to 88.65, showing a wide range of values.
From the alignment results, the amino acid patterns responding to stress were found in groups II-c, II-d, and II-e (Fig. 2). In contrast to groups II-d and II-e, where only stress-related WRKY genes were reported, group II-c contained WRKY genes that play important roles in plant growth and development besides stress-response. All stress-related genes clustered in the group II-e branch had the amino acid pattern 'PSD-S/A/L-WAWRKYGQKPIKGSPYPR-G/S-YYRCSSSKGC'. Similarly, the amino acid pattern 'VPA-I/V-S-X-K-M/L/V/I-ADIP-P/A/V-D-D/E-Y/F-S-WRKYGQKPIKGSP-H/Y-PRGYYKCS-S/T-V/M-RGCPARKVER' was found in the sequences of reported genes responding to abiotic stress clustered in the group II-d branch, which might be closely related to stress. In addition, for group II-c, an amino acid sequence pattern 'T-R/K-S/T-E/Q/D-V/I/L-E/D-I/V/H/N-L/M-D/E-D-G/E-F/Y-K/R-WRKYG-Q/K-K-A/T-VKN-S/N-P' in the stress-related genes clustered in one of the branches. From the alignment results, the sequences of WRKY genes involved in plant growth and development belonging to group II-c (FvWRKY48, ATWRKY75, ATWRKY45, ATWRKY12, ATWRKY13, and ATWRKY71) did not match this amino acid sequence pattern, further supporting the accuracy of this amino acid pattern in group II-c (Fig. 2a).
Figure 2.
Multiple sequence alignment of reported WRKY family proteins. (a) Multiple sequence alignment of reported WRKY proteins in group II-c. (b) Multiple sequence alignment of reported WRKY proteins in group II-d. (c) Multiple sequence alignment of reported WRKY proteins in group II-e.
Identification of all WRKY genes in D. catenatum
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To identify DcaWRKY genes, all the potential WRKY genes were extracted from two genome versions of D. catenatum; an old genome version with 63 WRKY genes and an updated genome version with 60 WRKY genes[48,53]. After sequences were aligned by MAFFT, all 60 genes from the updated genome version were present in the old genome version, except for three genes (Dca028175, Dca028770, and Dca027312). After verifying the sequence characteristics, Dca028175 and Dca027312 had the 'WRKYGQK' domain and a zinc finger motif. Dca028770 had the variant WRKY domain 'WRKYGKK' but no zinc finger motif. For all three genes containing the WRKY domain, the WRKY gene family members could be used for further analysis. In total, 63 candidate WRKY gene family members were identified in D. catenatum. To validate them, the amino acid sequences of all members were searched against NCBI, Pfam, and SMART databases for the presence of the WRKY domain. The results showed that all sequences contained the WRKY domain (Table 2).
Table 2. Characteristics of WRKY genes in D. catenatum.
Gene ID WRKY domain No. of
domainsNo. of
exonsNo. of
intronsGroup Conserved heptapeptide Zinc finger Zinc finger type Dca000627 WRKYGQK − − 1 3 2 II E Dca000637 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 2 1 II C Dca000671 WRKYGQK/WRKYGQK C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX22HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 5 4 I Dca000699 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 2 1 II C Dca000873 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 5 4 II B Dca002197 WKKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 2 1 I Dca002205 WRKDGTH/WRKYATN C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX23HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 6 5 I Dca002550 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 3 2 II E Dca002715 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 3 2 II C Dca003067 WRKYGQK C2HC CX7CX23HXC 1 3 2 III Dca003180 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 3 2 II D Dca003732 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 2 1 II C Dca004998 WRKYGQK/WRKYGQK C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX22HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 4 3 I Dca005043 WRKYGQK C2HC CX7CX23HXC 1 3 2 III Dca005048 WRKYGEK C2HC CX7CX23HXC 1 2 1 III Dca005648 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 3 2 II C Dca005780 WRKYGQK/WRKYGQK C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX22HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 5 4 I Dca006278 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 3 2 II D Dca006505 WRKYGQK/WRKYGQK C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX22HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 6 5 I Dca006646 WRKYGQK C2HC CX7CX23HXC 1 3 2 III Dca006787 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 3 2 II E Dca007186 WRKYGQK/WRKYGQK C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX22HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 5 4 I Dca007842 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 5 4 II B Dca008357 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 4 3 II A Dca008967 WTKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 3 2 I Dca008968 WNKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 2 1 I Dca008985 WRKYGQK/WRKYGQK C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX22HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 4 3 I Dca009368 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 3 2 II C Dca010430 WRKYGQK/WRKYGQK C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX22HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 5 4 I Dca010993 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 2 1 II C Dca011499 WRKYGQK/WRKYGQK C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX22HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 3 2 II C Dca011569 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 5 4 II B Dca011912 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 3 2 II A Dca011914 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 4 3 II A Dca012410 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 3 2 II E Dca012846 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 3 2 II C Dca013146 WRKYGQK C2HC CX7CX23HXC 1 3 2 III Dca013149 WRKYGQK C2HC CX7CX23HXC 1 3 2 III Dca013150 WRKYGEK C2HC CX7CX23HXC 1 3 2 III Dca014563 WRKYGQK C2HC CX7CX23HXC 1 2 1 III Dca015482 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 3 2 II D Dca015639 WRKYGKK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 3 2 II C Dca015848 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 2 1 II C Dca015914 WRKYGQK/WRKYGQK C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX22HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 3 2 II C Dca016437 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 2 1 II C Dca016988 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 2 1 II E Dca017113 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 3 2 II C Dca018137 WRKYGQK/WRKYGQK C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX22HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 4 3 I Dca018897 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 4 3 II A Dca019319 WRKYGQK C2HC CX7CX23HXC 1 3 2 III Dca019656 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 3 2 II E Dca019840 WRKYGKK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 3 2 II C Dca020159 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 2 1 II C Dca020342 WRKYGQK/WRKYGQK C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX22HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 5 4 I Dca020473 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 3 2 II E Dca021638 WRKYGEK/WRKYGEK —/C2HC —/CX7CX23HXC 2 5 4 III Dca023070 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 3 2 II D Dca024256 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX5CX23HXH 1 2 1 II E Dca024393 WRKYGQK/WRKYGQK C2H2/C2H2 CX4CX22HXH/CX4CX23HXH 2 4 3 I Dca026708 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 4 3 II A Dca027312 WRKYGQK C2HC CX7CX23HXC 1 3 2 III Dca028175 WRKYGQK C2H2 CX4CX23HXH 1 3 2 II C Dca028770 WRKYGKK - - 1 1 0 II C Phylogenetic
analysis and characterization of WRKY gene family members in D. catenatum -
WRKYs in D. catenatum, Arabidopsis, and rice were subjected to phylogenetic analysis to investigate the phylogenetic relationships and potential functions of these DcaWRKY genes (Fig. 3). The WRKY genes in D. catenatum were divided into the three groups I, II, and III based on amino acid sequence similarity, which is the same as the widely accepted classification system for this gene family in Arabidopsis[6]. Among all WRKY genes in D. catenatum, the number of groups I, II, and III was 14, 38, and 11, respectively. There were five subgroups in group II, which were IIa, IIb, IIc, IId, and IIe, and the number of WRKY genes in these groups was five, three, 18, four, and eight, respectively. The results indicated that more than half of WRKY genes were clustered in group II.
All DcaWRKY proteins were analyzed by ExPASy protparam to calculate the number of amino acids, molecular weight, pI, instability index, aliphatic index, and GRAVY. The molecular weight of DcaWRKY proteins varied from 10,998.29 to 78,355.63, pI ranged from 4.57 to 10.63, and the instability index ranged from 34.57 to 76.36 (Supplemental Table S2). Analysis of DcaWRKY proteins indicated that WRKY family members in D. catenatum did not show specificity in physicochemical properties, which is the same as reported drought-resistance WRKY proteins.
To further understand the biological functions of DcWRKY genes, WRKY domain types, intron/exon distribution, and conserved motifs were analyzed according to their phylogenetic relationships. Of the 77 WRKY domains, 65 contained perfectly conserved WRKYGQK domains, whereas the other domains differed in one or more amino acids in the conserved WRKY signature. In addition, eight conserved motifs in DcaWRKY proteins were found by TBtools. To better understand the phylogenetic relationships and classification of WRKY members in D. catenatum, the intron/exon distribution was analyzed by TBtools. The number of introns in DcaWRKY genes varied from zero to five. Similarity in gene structure and sequence characteristics of WRKY members in the same branch were used to validate the reliability of the phylogenetic classification (Fig. 4).
Figure 4.
Conserved motifs and gene structure of DcaWRKY genes according to phylogenetic relationships.
Group I contained two WRKY domains and two C2HC zinc finger motifs, but three DcaWRKY proteins (Dca002197, Dca008967, and Dca008968) contained only one WRKY domain and a C2H2 zinc finger motif. Besides, members of group I had five WRKY domain variant types—WKKYGQK in Dca002197, WTKYGQK in Dca008967, WNKYGQK in Dca008968, and both WRKDGTH and WRKYATN in Dca002205. Notably, the variant types WRKDGTH, WRKYATN, WTKYGQK, and WNKYGQK were first found in D. catenatum (Table 2). The number of introns in group I members widely varied from one to five. For example, Dca002205 and Dca006505 had five introns, whereas Dca002197 and Dca008968 had only one intron. Furthermore, all the DcaWRKY members of group I contained motifs 1 and 2. Interestingly, motif 7 was unique to group I (Fig. 4).
Group II proteins were close to group I proteins in the phylogenetic tree, but they contained only one WRKY domain, except for Dca011499 and Dca015914, which had two domains and two C2H2 zinc finger motifs. Besides, the only WRKY variant type WRKYGKK in group II was found in group II-c members Dca015639, Dca019840, and Dca028770 (Table 2). Similar to group I, the number of introns in group II varied from one to four except for Dca028770, which lacked introns. However, the number of introns was more focused in each subgroup of group II compared with group I. For example, groups II-a, II-b, and II-d contain three, four, and two introns, respectively. Among the three subgroups, the distribution and quantity of the motifs in all genes of the same subgroup were the same. Motifs 6, 1, and 2 were dispersed in group II-d. All members of group II-b had motifs 5, 1, 4, and 2, whereas DcaWRKY members of group II-a had motifs 5 and 2. Besides, motif 5 was uniquely dispersed in group II (Fig. 4).
All members of group III had one WRKYGQK domain, except for Dca021638, which had two WRKYGEK domains. Unlike groups I and II, the zinc finger motif of most WRKY proteins in group III was replaced by a C2HC zinc finger motif. For Dca0021638, variants of WRKYGEK/WRKYGEK or loss of a C2HC zinc finger motif might contribute to its classification in group III rather than group I (Table 2). Besides, all group III members had two exons except for Dca005048 (one), Dca014563 (one), and Dca021638 (four). The motif analysis results indicated that all members of group III contained motifs 1, 2, 6, and 8, and motif 8 was only dispersed in group III (Fig. 4).
Identification of the potential stress-responsive members of groups II-c, II-d, and II-e in D. catenatum
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The identified stress-related amino acid pattern 'PSD-S/A/L-WAWRKYGQKPIKGSPYPR-G/S-YYRCSSSKGC' was used to identify WRKY genes of group II-e in D. catenatum. After multiple sequence alignment, Dca006787, Dca002550, Dca012410, and Dca019656 shared amino acid patterns and were identified as potential stress response genes (Fig. 5). Likewise, Dca019840, Dca005648, and Dca028770 of group II-c were also identified using the sequence pattern 'T-R/K-S/T-E/Q/D-V/I/L-E/D-I/V/H/N-L/M-D/E-D-G/E-F/Y-K/R-WRKYG-Q/K-K-A/T-VKN-S/N-P' (Fig. 5). In addition, using the 'VPA-I/V-S-X-K-M/L/V/I-ADIP-P/A/V-D-D/E-Y/F-S-WRKYGQKPIKGSP-H/Y-PRGYYKCS-S/T-V/M-RGCPARKVER' amino acid pattern, one potential gene, Dca023070, of group II-d in D. catenatum was identified as responsive to abiotic stress (Fig. 5).
Expression pattern analysis of DcaWRKY genes
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Different WRKY genes have different tissue-specific expression patterns. To identify the accuracy of these patterns, the expression of all WRKY genes in roots and leaves of D. catenatum was separately analyzed under drought stress (Fig. 6, Supplemental Fig. S1).
Figure 6.
The summarized figure of DcaWRKY genes expression in roots and leaves. '↑' indicates that gene expression increased under drought treatment. '↓' indicates decreased expression under drought treatment. Dca000671, Dca003180, Dca005043, Dca008968, Dca013149, and Dca017113 were differently expressed in leaves under drought treatment; similarly, Dca011499, Dca011914, Dca016988, Dca018137, Dca019840, and Dca027312 were differently expressed in roots. Dca000627, Dca002550, Dca006787, Dca002715, Dca005648, Dca007842, Dca010430, Dca011569, Dca015914, Dca016437, Dca019656, Dca024256, Dca026708, Dca028770, and Dca003067 were expressed both in leaves and roots under drought treatment.
A total of 29 differentially expressed WRKY genes in roots and leaves of D. catenatum were identified by the data. In roots, the expression of 22 DcaWRKY genes (Dca000627, Dca002550, Dca002715, Dca003067, Dca005648, Dca006787, Dca007842, Dca010430, Dca011499, Dca011569, Dca011914, Dca015914, Dca016437, Dca016988, Dca018137, Dca019840, Dca023070, Dca024256, Dca026708, Dca027312, Dca019656, and Dca028770) showed a change in drought-treated plants compared with untreated plants. Among these, most genes showed a decrease in expression, especially the Dca010430 gene, which induced a > 8.0-fold decrease in response to drought treatment. In contrast, Dca003067 and Dca018137 were upregulated and showed an opposite expression pattern (Fig. 7). In leaves, 22 WRKY members that were differentially expressed when responding to drought were considered drought-responsive genes; these included Dca000627, Dca000671, Dca002550, Dca002715, Dca003067, Dca003180, Dca005043, Dca005648, Dca006787, Dca007842, Dca008968, Dca010430, Dca011569, Dca012410, Dca013149, Dca015914, Dca016437, Dca017113, Dca024256, Dca019656, Dca026708, and Dca028770. All of these showed a decrease in their expression levels, except for Dca002550, Dca005648, and Dca010430, whose expression levels showed 2.0- to 11.0-fold increase in drought-treated plants compared with untreated plants (Fig. 8).
Figure 7.
Heatmap of differentially expressed DcaWRKY genes under drought stress in roots. The color scale shows increasing expression levels from green to red, which represents log2-transformed FPKM.
Figure 8.
Heatmap of differentially expressed DcaWRKY genes under drought stress in leaves. The color scale shows increasing expression levels from green to red, which represents log2-transformed FPKM.
A total of 15 genes in both roots and leaves showed a significant difference in expression levels when responding to drought stress, including Dca000627, Dca002550, Dca006787, Dca002715, Dca005648, Dca007842, Dca010430, Dca011569, Dca015914, Dca016434, Dca024256, Dca019656, Dca026708, Dca028770, and Dca003067. Interestingly, the identified drought-responsive gene Dca003067 showed the opposite expression patterns in the leaves and roots. Drought treatment led to a significant decrease in the expression level in leaves but an increased expression in roots.
In leaves, seven drought-responsive genes, including three genes whose expression increased and four genes whose expression decreased, were randomly selected for validation by qRT-PCR. These genes were Dca002550, Dca002715, Dca005648, Dca007842, Dca010430, Dca016437, and Dca006787 (Table 3, Fig. 9). All of them were differentially expressed in drought-treated plants compared with untreated plants. Thus, the expression patterns of these seven genes obtained by qRT-PCR were consistent with the transcriptome analysis results, confirming the reliability of the transcriptome data.
Table 3. qRT-PCR primers of DcaWRKYs.
Primer name Sequence (5'-3') Dca002550-F GTGTTCGAGCTCAACCATCA Dca002550-R TGATCGTGATCTCCCATGAA Dca005648-F GGCCGATTCACCGAATAATA Dca005648-R TTTCAACACGCTTCTTCACG Dca006787-F GCGATCTCTTTGCCTCAAAC Dca006787-R TTCCTTGCTGAGCATCCTTT Dca007842-F GCTCCTCTACCACCCATTCA Dca007842-R GTGAGGTCGAGGGTGATTGT Dca010430-F AGGAAGTCTGACGACGGCTA Dca010430-R CGAGTGGACTGAGGCTTAGG Dca016437-F ATCGTTGCACCACACAGAAG Dca016437-R AAGTCATGGTGGAAGCTTGG -
After a comprehensive analysis of reported functional WRKY gene sequences, gene structure, and phylogenetic analysis, the amino acid patterns 'T-R/K-S/T-E/Q/D-V/I/L-E/D-I/V/H/N-L/M-D/E-D-G/E-F/Y-K/R-WRKYG-Q/K-K-A/T-VKN-S/N-P', 'VPA-I/V-S-X-K-M/L/V/I-ADIP-P/A/V-D-D/E-Y/F-S-WRKYGQKPIKGSP-H/Y-PRGYYKCS-S/T-V/M-RGCPARKVER', and 'PSD-S/A/L-WAWRKYGQKPIKGSPYPR-G/S-YYRCSSSKGC' were found in groups II-c, II-d, and II-e, respectively, which might be valid features of genes responding to stress in these three subgroups. Then, D. catenatum was used to validate these amino acid patterns. Four WRKY genes in group II-e (Dca006787, Dca002550, Dca012410, and Dca019656), three genes in group II-c (Dca019840, Dca005648, and Dca028770), and one gene in group II-d (Dca023070) were identified by homology searches. The expression of the identified DcaWRKY genes in roots and leaves was further analyzed under drought stress using qRT-PCR data. The expression levels of all potential genes identified as responsive to abiotic stress (stress under the drought treatment) were found to significantly change compared with untreated plants, suggesting that these identified amino acid patterns were valid and feasible for identifying abiotic stress in D. catenatum.
Although further studies are needed, the amino acid patterns identified in response to stress not only provide an ideal method for quickly identifying stress-related genes in D. catenatum but also offer a new perspective for the identification of functional genes in other species.
Diverse expression patterns of DcaWRKY genes in different tissues
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In this study, DcaWRKY gene expression and the phylogeny of WRKY genes were analyzed. Various expression mechanisms of WRKY genes in D. catenatum were found under drought stress.
All differentially expressed WRKY genes in roots and leaves were comprehensively analyzed. The expression changes in WRKY genes in roots and leaves were analyzed first. Among all 29 differentially expressed WRKY genes, the expression levels of 14 DcaWRKY genes were changed only in roots or leaves when responding to drought stress. Among these 14 WRKY genes, seven were differentially expressed only in roots, including Dca011499, Dca011914, Dca016988, Dca018137, Dca019840, and Dca027312. Similarly, Dca000671, Dca003180, Dca005043, Dca008968, Dca013149, and Dca017113 were differentially expressed only in leaves. Some DcaWRKY genes might be differentially expressed only in specific tissues when responding to drought stress. Among the 14 WRKY genes, the expression levels of Dca002550, Dca005648, and Dca010430 were downregulated in leaves but were upregulated in roots in drought-treated plants compared with untreated plants. In contrast, under drought stress, Dca003067 expression was highly upregulated in leaves and downregulated in roots. Except for these three genes, all 11 genes among the 14 WRKY genes showed the same trend of expression in roots and leaves when responding to drought stress. Of the 11 DcaWRKY genes, only the expression of Dca003067, clustered in group III, was upregulated in drought-treated plants, whereas other genes were clustered in group II, and their expression levels were downregulated compared with the control. Genes with expression patterns consistent with phylogenetic branching correlations were clustered in group II; thus, we presume that the downregulation of expression levels is associated with the characteristics of group II. The molecular mechanisms of drought responses in different tissues of D. catenatum might be different.
WRKY phylogeny was systematically analyzed in Arabidopsis, rice, and D. catenatum. According to the phylogenetic tree, the members that belong to the same branch might possess a conserved function because of their common evolutionary processes. A close relationship was found between Dca016437 and Dca002715 and OsWRKY11, which was identified as an anti-drought gene in rice by the phylogenetic tree. These two genes might have the same response mechanism as OsWRKY11, whose ectopic expression resulted in constitutive expression of defense-associated genes to enhance tolerance to drought stress in rice[57].
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About this article
Cite this article
Zhao Y, Zheng Y, Jiang L, Niu Y, Yang Y, et al. 2022. Identification of stress-related characteristics of the WRKY gene family: A case study of Dendrobium catenatum. Ornamental Plant Research 2:21 doi: 10.48130/OPR-2022-0021
Identification of stress-related characteristics of the WRKY gene family: A case study of Dendrobium catenatum
- Received: 30 April 2022
- Accepted: 16 November 2022
- Published online: 23 December 2022
Abstract: As one of the largest families of transcription factors (TFs) in plants, the WRKY TF family plays a key role in regulating plant responses to various biotic and abiotic stresses. However, there is no confirmed method to quickly identify stress-responsive members from the WRKY gene family. In this study, all reported functional WRKY genes were first analyzed, and the amino acid patterns in response to stress were identified in group II-c (T-R/K-S/T-E/Q/D-V/I/L-E/D-I/V/H/N-L/M-D/E-D-G/E-F/Y-K/R-WRKYG-Q/K-K-A/T-VKN-S/N-P), group II-d (VPA-I/V-S-X-K-M/L/V/I-ADIP-P/A/V-D-D/E-Y/F-S-WRKYGQKPIKGSP-H/Y-PRGYYKCS-S/T-V/M-RGCPARKVER), and group II-e (PSD-S/A/L-WAWRKYGQKPIKGSPYPR-G/S-YYRCSSSKGC). WRKY genes in Dendrobium catenatum were used to validate the accuracy of these patterns. A total of 63 DcaWRKY genes were identified, their gene structures, conserved motifs, and gene expression patterns were analyzed, and a phylogenetic tree was constructed. Gene expression patterns were then analyzed under drought stress, and seven DcaWRKY genes (Dca002550, Dca002715, Dca005648, Dca007842, Dca010430, Dca016437, and Dca006787) were randomly selected to determine their expression levels and verify their expression patterns by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction analysis. The identified amino acid patterns were validated by drought-responsive WRKY genes in D. catenatum, confirming the accuracy of these amino acid patterns and providing valuable insights into further research of the WRKY family in D. catenatum.
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Key words:
- WRKY genes /
- Abiotic stress /
- Biotic stress /
- Amino acid pattern /
- Dendrobium catenatum /
- Phylogenetic analysis /
- Gene expression