Affiliation:
1. State Key Laboratory of Subtropical Silviculture Zhejiang A&F University Hangzhou China
2. Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Resources Protection and Innovation of Traditional Chinese Medicine Zhejiang A&F University Hangzhou China
3. Zhejiang Institute of Subtropical Crops Zhejiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences Wenzhou China
4. Pan'an Traditional Chinese Medicine Industry Innovation and Development Institute Zhejiang PR China
5. Shulan International Medical College Zhejiang Shuren University Hangzhou China
Abstract
AbstractCold stress seriously affects plant development and secondary metabolism. The basic region/leucine zipper (bZIP) is one of the largest transcription factor (TFs) family and widely involved in plant cold stress response. However, the function of bZIP in Dendrobium catenatum has not been well‐documented. Cold inhibited the growth of D. catenatum and increased total polysaccharide and alkaloid contents in stems. Here, 62 DcbZIP genes were identified in D. catenatum, which were divided into 13 subfamilies. Among them, 58 DcbZIPs responded to cold stress, which were selected based on the transcriptome database produced from cold‐treated D. catenatum seedlings. Specifically, the expression of DcbZIP3/6/28 was highly induced by cold treatment in leaves or stems. Gene sequence analysis indicated that DcbZIP3/6/28 contains the bZIP conserved domain and is localized to the cell nucleus. Co‐expression networks showed that DcbZIP6 was significantly negatively correlated with PAL2 (palmitoyl‐CoA), which is involved in flavonoid metabolism. Moreover, DcbZIP28 has significant negative correlations with various metabolism‐related genes in the polysaccharide metabolic pathway, including PFKA1 (6‐phosphofructokinase), ALDO2 (aldose‐6‐phosphate reductase) and SCRK5 (fructokinase). These results implied that DcbZIP6 or DcbZIP28 are mainly involved in flavonoid or polysaccharide metabolism. Overall, these findings provide new insights into the roles of the DcbZIP gene family in secondary metabolism in D. catenatum under cold stress.