Haplotypes of ATP-Binding Cassette CaABCC6 in Chickpea from Kazakhstan Are Associated with Salinity Tolerance and Leaf Necrosis via Oxidative Stress

Gulmira Khassanova, Satyvaldy Jatayev, Ademi Gabdola, Marzhan Kuzbakova, Aray Zailasheva, Gulnar Kylyshbayeva, Carly Schramm, Kathryn Schleyer, Lauren Philp-Dutton, Crystal Sweetman, Peter Anderson, Colin L.D. Jenkins, Kathleen L. Soole, Yuri Shavrukov

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Salinity tolerance was studied in chickpea accessions from a germplasm collection and in cultivars from Kazakhstan. After NaCl treatment, significant differences were found between genotypes, which could be arranged into three groups. Those that performed poorest were found in group 1, comprising five ICC accessions with the lowest chlorophyll content, the highest leaf necrosis (LN), Na+ accumulation, malondialdehyde (MDA) content, and a low glutathione ratio GSH/GSSG. Two cultivars, Privo-1 and Tassay, representing group 2, were moderate in these traits, while the best performance was for group 3, containing two other cultivars, Krasnokutsky-123 and Looch, which were found to have mostly green plants and an exact opposite pattern of traits. Marker–trait association (MTA) between 6K DArT markers and four traits (LN, Na+, MDA, and GSH/GSSG) revealed the presence of four possible candidate genes in the chickpea genome that may be associated with the three groups. One gene, ATP-binding cassette, CaABCC6, was selected, and three haplotypes, A, D1, and D2, were identified in plants from the three groups. Two of the most salt-tolerant cultivars from group 3 were found to have haplotype D2 with a novel identified SNP. RT-qPCR analysis confirmed that this gene was strongly expressed after NaCl treatment in the parental-and breeding-line plants of haplotype D2. Mass spectrometry of seed proteins showed a higher accumulation of glutathione reductase and S-transferase, but not peroxidase, in the D2 haplotype. In conclusion, the CaABCC6 gene was hypothesized to be associated with a better response to oxidative stress via glutathione metabolism, while other candidate genes are likely involved in the control of chlorophyll content and Na+ accumulation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number823
Number of pages24
JournalBiomolecules
Volume14
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2024

Keywords

  • chickpea
  • DArT analysis
  • gene expression
  • glutathione
  • haplotype
  • malondialdehyde
  • marker-trait association
  • oxidative stress
  • salinity
  • SNP

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Haplotypes of ATP-Binding Cassette CaABCC6 in Chickpea from Kazakhstan Are Associated with Salinity Tolerance and Leaf Necrosis via Oxidative Stress'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this