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GrainGenes Reference Report: PEN-19-275

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Reference
PEN-19-275
Title
Expression of cold-inducible genes and frost hardiness in the crown meristem of young barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Igri) plants grown in different environments
Journal
Plant, Cell and Environment
Year
1996
Volume
19
Pages
275-290
Author
Pearce R
Dunn M
Rixon J
Harrison P
Hughes M
Abstract
The purpose of this work was to examine environmental control of expression, at the mRNA level, of cold-inducible genes and to test the relationship of the expression of the genes to cold acclimation. Barley plants (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Igri) at the three- to four-leaf stage were (a) grown in different temperature environments between 20/15 degrees C and +4/-4 degrees C or (b) transferred between 20/15 degrees C and 6/2 degrees C or (c) grown under drought or nutrient stress conditions. Frost hardiness (using a regrowth method) and mRNA levels for three cold-induced genes, blt4.9, blt14 and blt101, from meristematic crown tissue (vegetative shoot meristem plus subtending stem and associated root initials) were measured. Hardiness and levels of blt4.9, blt14 and blt101 mRNAs increased with lower growth temperatures, below a maximum inductive temperature. Prior temperature environment and plant age affected the rate of change in mRNA levels of these genes in response to a change of temperature environment. Hardiness was strongly correlated with mRNA levels of these genes in plants grown in different temperature environments. This correlation did not extend to plants exposed to drought or nutrient stresses. Implications are drawn for plant responses to a warmer climate.
Keyword
[ Hide all but 1 of 21 ]
age
blt101 gene
blt14 gene
blt4.9 gene
cold
cold-resistance
drought
environmental-temperature
frost
gene expression
genetic regulation
hordeum vulgare
messenger rna
multigene-families
nutrient-deficiencies
plant proteins
root
root-initials
shoot-meristems
structural genes
water-stress

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