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Genetics and Microarray in Environmental Stress Response
8.2 ENVIRONMENTAL STRESSES AND METHODS FOR STUDYING
THE GENES THAT RESPOND TO THEM
Environmental stresses are the most important factors that reduce the perfor-
mance of agricultural products worldwide. Environmental stresses include
temperature, drought, salinity, flooding, quantity, and quality of light, atmo-
spheric CO2 concentration, soil nutrients, and heavy metal content (Chen
& Soltis, 2020). Resistance to environmental stresses is a quantitative trait
that controls many genes. To understand this trait, the gene network, which
includes various genes that are involved in controlling the desired traits
must be examined. The genes in a gene network definitely have common
cis-elements (CRM) and can have different cis-elements. Different datasets
are used to draw the gene network and high throughput methods are used to
evaluate the gene network.
There are different methods of determining the quantity and quality of
transcripts, which fall into three general categories:
•
Hybridization-based approaches:
¾ Northern blot;
¾ Microarray (Table 8.1).
•
PCR-based approaches:
¾ Quantitative PCR (qPCR);
¾ Real-time PCR.
•
Sequencing-based approaches:
¾ Sanger;
¾ SAGE;
¾ MPSS;
¾ RNA-Seq.
High throughput methods for studying gene expression in plants are
SAGE, DD PCR (differential display PCR), microarray and RNA-Seq. In
these methods, transcripts of many genes are examined simultaneously.
TABLE 8.1 Some of the Purposes of Performing Microarray
Types of Chips Target
Confirmation by
cDNA chip
Investigation of gene expression
Northern blot and real time PCR
DNA chip
Find SNP in DNA sequence
Southern blot
Protein chip
Testing a large number of proteins
Western blot