Zhaolong Wang
Shanghai Jiao Tong University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Zhaolong Wang.
Journal of Plant Physiology | 2012
Yiming Liu; Hongmei Du; Xiaoxia He; Bingru Huang; Zhaolong Wang
This study was designed to identify physiological responses and differential proteomic responses to salinity stress in roots of a salt-tolerant grass species, seashore paspalum (Paspalum vaginatum), and a salt-sensitive grass species, centipedegrass (Eremochloa ophiuroides). Plants of both species were exposed to salinity stress by watering the soil with 300 mM NaCl solution for 20 d in a growth chamber. The 2-DE analysis revealed that the abundance of 8 protein spots significantly increased and 14 significantly decreased in seashore paspalum, while 19 and 16 protein spots exhibited increase and decrease in abundance in centipedegrass, respectively. Eight protein spots that exhibited enhanced abundance in seashore paspalum under salinity stress were subjected to mass spectrometry analysis. Seven protein spots were successfully identified, they are peroxidase (POD, 2.36-fold), cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase (cMDH, 5.84-fold), asorbate peroxidase (APX, 4.03-fold), two mitochondrial ATPSδ chain (2.26-fold and 4.78-fold), hypothetical protein LOC100274119 (5.01-fold) and flavoprotein wrbA (2.20-fold), respectively. Immunblotting analysis indicated that POD and ATPSδ chain were significantly up-regulated in seashore paspalum at 20 d of salinity treatment while almost no expression in both control and salt treatment of centipedegrass. These results indicated that the superior salinity tolerance in seashore paspalum, compared to centipedegrass, could be associated with a high abundance of proteins involved in ROS detoxification and energy metabolism.
Plant Growth Regulation | 2005
Y.Y. Luo; Thomas J. Gianfagna; Harry W. Janes; Bingru Huang; Zhaolong Wang; Jinpeng Xing
Transgenic tomato plants were produced with the isopentenyl transferase gene (ipt) ligated to a promoter that is active exclusively in sink tissue. Initially, transgenic plants had smaller, round-scale leaves, swollen stems, and exhibited early development of lateral shoots compared to wild type. Expression of the ipt gene resulted in the formation of unbranched roots on cuttings and delayed senescence in excised leaves. Callus and root formation occurred on excised leaves and leaf discs during dark incubation. The retention percentage of chlorophyll, as well as cytokinin in excised leaves or discs was significantly greater than wild type. Transgenic tomato fruit had elevated levels of cytokinins in the first days after fruit set and these levels were maintained longer during fruit development.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Peng Zhou; Yuan An; Zhaolong Wang; Hongmei Du; Bingru Huang
To understand molecular mechanisms of perennial grass adaptation to drought stress, genes associated with drought avoidance or tolerance traits were identified and their expression patterns were characterized in C4 hybrid bermudagrass [Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers.×C. transvaalensis Burtt Davy, cv. Tifway] and common bermudagrass (C. dactylon, cv. C299). Plants of drought-tolerant ‘Tifway’ and drought-sensitive ‘C299’ were exposed to drought for 5 d (mild stress) and 10 d (severe stress) by withholding irrigation in a growth chamber. ‘Tifway’ maintained significantly lower electrolyte leakage and higher relative water content than ‘C299’ at both 5 and 10 d of drought stress. Four cDNA libraries via suppression subtractive hybridization analysis were constructed and identified 277 drought-responsive genes in the two genotypes at 5 and 10 d of drought stress, which were mainly classified into the functional categories of stress defense, metabolism, osmoregulation, membrane system, signal and regulator, structural protein, protein synthesis and degradation, and energy metabolism. Quantitative-PCR analysis confirmed the expression of 36 drought up-regulated genes that were more highly expressed in drought-tolerant ‘Tifway’ than drought-sensitive ‘C299’, including those for drought avoidance traits, such as cuticle wax formation (CER1 and sterol desaturase), for drought tolerance traits, such as dehydration-protective proteins (dehydrins, HVA-22-like protein) and oxidative stress defense (superoxide dismutase, dehydroascorbate reductase, 2-Cys peroxiredoxins), and for stress signaling (EREBP-4 like protein and WRKY transcription factor). The results suggest that the expression of genes for stress signaling, cuticle wax accumulation, antioxidant defense, and dehydration-protective protein accumulation could be critically important for warm-season perennial grass adaptation to long-term drought stress.
Crop Science | 2004
Zhaolong Wang; Bingru Huang
Physiologia Plantarum | 2010
Longxing Hu; Zhaolong Wang; Bingru Huang
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 2003
Zhaolong Wang; Bingru Huang; Qingzhang Xu
Journal of Plant Physiology | 2010
Longxing Hu; Zhaolong Wang; Hongmei Du; Bingru Huang
Physiologia Plantarum | 2011
Hongmei Du; Zhaolong Wang; Wenjuan Yu; Yimin Liu; Bingru Huang
Physiologia Plantarum | 2011
Yan Zhao; Hongmei Du; Zhaolong Wang; Bingru Huang
Annals of Botany | 2002
Zhaolong Wang; Stefania Mambelli; Tim L. Setter