Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7228480 | Annals of Agrarian Science | 2018 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
High temperature affects diverse physiological, biochemical and molecular processes including gene expression and genetic stability. To demostrate this, primary leaves of moth bean were harvested from eight days old seedlings followed by heat shock treatment at 37, 42, 47 and 52â¯Â°C for 10, 20 and 30â¯min. The response of tissue for callusing was comparatively early in explants treated at 37, 42 and 47â¯Â°C for 10â¯min. However, regeneration was negatively affected by most of the heat treatments. A few polypeptides were found to be up regulated as well as down regulated with heat shock treatments. Some proteins were specifically regulated at higher temperatures of 42° and 47â¯Â°C. Two polypeptides were also up regulated in the protein profiling of callus; however, these were different than the once observed in protein profiling of leaf explant immediately after heat treatment. Moreover, these bands were found in only one treatment each, viz. one in 20â¯min of 47â¯Â°C (100 kD) and another in 30â¯min of 47â¯Â°C (36.7 kD). These may be expected to be consequence of genetic change (mutation). RAPD analysis further revealed that plantlets obtained at 47â¯Â°C generated a novel band indicating mutagenic effect of heat shock treatment.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Biomedical Engineering
Authors
R. Sharma, P. Sharma, S. Kumar, S.N. Saxena, V. Khandelwal, M. Rizwan,