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Molecular cloning and functional characterization of a novel cotton CBL-interacting protein kinase gene (GhCIPK6) reveals its involvement in multiple abiotic stress tolerance in transgenic plants

Update Time: 2013-05-31 19:44:00Click: times
He L, Yang X, Wang L, Zhu L, Zhou T, Deng J, Zhang X. Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2013 May 31;435(2):209-15. doi: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2013.04.080

Abstract

Plant CIPKs were specific Ser/Thr protein kinases, which were activated through interaction with calcineurin B-like protein (CBL) containing four EF hands for Ca(2+) binding. The CBL/CIPK complexes play an important role in signal transduction in biotic and abiotic stresses, as well as developmental processes. Here a Ser/Thr protein kinase gene (defined as GhCIPK6), which was isolated from RNA-Seq profile during cotton somatic embryogenesis in our previous research was characterized. The GhCIPK6 gene contains an ORF of 1296bp that putatively encodes a polypeptide of 431 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 48.46kDa and isoelectric point of 9.12. Sequence alignment analysis confirmed that GhCIPK6 has no intron, and it was homologous to AtCIPK6. Expression analysis of the GhCIPK6 suggested that they might function in diverse tissues, including styles and anthers but not fibers. In addition, expression of the GhCIPK6 gene was induced by salt, drought and ABA treatments. Overexpression of GhCIPK6 significantly enhances the tolerance to salt, drought and ABA stresses in transgenic Arabidopsis, indicating that GhCIPK6 acts as a positive regulator in response to salt and drought stress, and is supposed to be a potential candidate gene to improve stress tolerance by genetic manipulation in cotton and other crops.