Comparative physiological, biochemical, and leaf proteome responses of contrasting wheat varieties to drought stress
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Plants
Abstract
Drought stress severely affects crop productivity and threatens food security. As current
trends of global warming are predicted to exacerbate droughts, developing drought-resilient crops becomes
urgent. Here, we used the drought-tolerant (BW35695) and drought-sensitive (BW4074) wheat
varieties to investigate the physiological, biochemical, and leaf proteome responses underpinning
drought tolerance. In response to drought, the tolerant variety had higher osmolyte accumulation and
maintained higher leaf water content than the sensitive variety. BW35695 also had an enhanced antioxidant
enzyme capacity and reduced reactive oxygen species (ROS), resulting in diminished membrane
lipid damage, as reflected by malondialdehyde content. Proteomic analysis revealed that droughtinduced
differential expression of proteins involved in diverse biological processes in both wheat
varieties, including primary and secondary metabolism, protein synthesis/folding/degradation, defense/
ROS detoxification, energy, transcription, and cell structure. Notably, photosynthesis emerged
as the most enriched biochemical process targeted for suppression in the drought-tolerant BW35695
wheat, but not in drought-sensitive BW4074, possibly as a survival strategy for averting cell damage
inflicted by photosynthesis-derived ROS. Additionally, protein synthesis-related proteins were highly
upregulated in BW35695, presumably to drive cell-wide stress-adaptive responses. The protein network
identified here will be useful in further studies to understand the molecular basis for divergent
drought response phenotypes in crops.
Keywords: Triticum aestivum; drought; proline; oxidative stress; lipid peroxidation; antioxidant
enzymes; proteomics; iTRAQ; photosynthesis; gene expression
