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A guayule C-repeat binding factor is highly activated in guayule under freezing temperature and enhances freezing tolerance when expressed in Arabidopsis thaliana
Abstract
Natural Rubber (NR)-producing guayule (Parthenium argentatum Gray) has been developed as a new crop to diversify NR production. Guayule NR is mainly synthesized in its stem and is upregulated by cold temperatures. A guayule C-repeat binding factor 4 (PaCBF4) was highly expressed in cold-treated stem tissue, coinciding with active rubber biosynthesis and accumulation. Sequence alignments of PaCBF4 with other CBFs indicated that PaCBF4 contains DNA-binding domains responsible for regulating cold-regulated (COR) gene expression. Spatial gene expression profiling of PaCBF4 revealed that stems had the highest expression level among different organs examined. We further confirmed the function of PaCBF4 as regulator of cold-signaling processes by expressing it in the model plant Arabidopsis under a constitutive ubiquitin promoter from potato. The resulting transgenic Arabidopsis lines expressing PaCBF4 turned on expression of a set of Arabidopsis COR genes under both room (24ºC) and cold (4ºC) temperatures, in contrast to the wild-type Arabidopsis that expressed these COR genes solely upon cold treatment. Furthermore, the transgenic plants displayed enhanced freezing tolerance at −5ºC, exhibiting a survival rate of 88–98% compared with 0% survival rate of wild-type plants. Our results suggest that PaCBF4 is a functional member of the guayule CBF gene family and plays a significant role in cold and freeze tolerance. Interestingly, overexpressing PaCBF4 in Arabidopsis did not affect the normal phenotype of the plant during vegetative and inflorescence growth, but the gene led to more undeveloped siliques after flowering.
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