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Article|21 Jun 2024|OPEN
BcSRC2 interacts with BcAPX4 to increase ascorbic acid content for responding ABA signaling and drought stress in pak choi
Zhanghong Yu1 , Xiaoshan Chen1 , Zhongwen Chen1 , Haibin Wang1 , Sayyed Hamad Ahmad Shah1 , Aimei Bai1 , Tongkun Liu1 , Dong Xiao1 , Xilin Hou1 and Ying Li,1 ,
1National Key Laboratory of Crop Genetics and Germplasm Enhancement, Key Laboratory of Crop Physiology Ecology and Production Management, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for Modern Crop Production, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China
*Corresponding author. E-mail: yingli@njau.edu.cn

Horticulture Research 11,
Article number: uhae165 (2024)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhae165
Views: 1113

Received: 15 Jan 2024
Accepted: 10 Jun 2024
Published online: 21 Jun 2024

Abstract

As a reducing substance, ascorbic acid functioned well in abiotic and biotic stress. However, the regulatory mechanism of drought resistance is rarely known in pak choi. Here we found a gene BcSRC2 containing a C2 domain that responds to ABA signal and drought regulation in pak choi. Silencing of BcSRC2 reduces ascorbic acid content and drought resistance of pak choi. In Arabidopsis, BcSRC2 overexpression promotes ascorbic acid accumulation and increases drought tolerance. Meanwhile, transcriptome analysis between WT and BcSRC2-overexpressing pak choi suggests that ascorbic acid-related genes are regulated. BcSRC2 interacts with BcAPX4 and inhibit APX activity in vitro and in vivo, increasing the ascorbic acid content. We also found that drought stress increases ABA content, which reduces the expression of BcMYB30. BcMYB30 bound to the promoter of BcSRC2 and reduced its expression. Overall, our results suggest that a regulatory module, BcMYB30-BcSRC2-BcAPX4, plays a central role in increasing ascorbic acid content for responding ABA-mediated drought regulation in pak choi.