Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Calcineurin B-like (CBL) and CBL-interacting protein kinase (CIPK) system constitute critical signaling modules mediating plant responses to abiotic stress. Although these families have been studied across various species, their evolutionary dynamics across grasses and the functional plasticity of specific isoforms remain elusive. METHODS: A genome-wide analysis of CBL and CIPK families was conducted across five major Poaceae species (Oryza sativa, Triticum aestivum, Zea mays, Sorghum bicolor, and Saccharum spontaneum). Phylogenetic and synteny analyses were analyzed to family expansion and evolution. Cis-regulatory elements analysis in gene promoter regions were examined to predict potential stress-responsive features. Expression profiles of OsCBL and OsCIPK gene families were examined by qRT-PCR under conditions involving PEG-induced osmotic stress, pathogen strain P6 inoculation, and exogenous application of the phytohormones abscisic acid (ABA) and methyl jasmonate (MeJA). Protein-protein interactions between selected CBL (OsCBL4) and CIPK pairs were assessed via Yeast Two-Hybrid (Y2H) and Luciferase Complementation Imaging assays (LCI). RESULTS: Phylogenetic and synteny analyses indicated that segmental duplications have contributed substantially to the expansion of these gene families. Promoter analysis revealed that the majority of CBL and CIPK family members, exemplified by OsCBL4, traditionally characterized as a salt sensor, possesses a cis-element architecture (rich in ABREs and MBS) heavily biased towards dehydration responsiveness. Expression profiling showed that OsCBL4 is significantly hyper-induced by direct osmotic stress (PEG) but exhibits almost no response to exogenous ABA. A subset of kinases genes (e.g., OsCIPK2, 9, 18) displayed PEG-induced expression patterns resembling those of OsCBL4, whereas OsCIPK30 remained transcriptionally unresponsive under the same conditions. Protein interaction assays demonstrated that OsCBL4 physically interacts exclusively with PEG-responsive transcriptionally activated kinases such as OsCIPK9, but failed to interact with the non-responsive OsCIPK30. CONCLUSIONS: Our study provides a genomic characterization of CBL and CIPK families across five major Poaceae species. The combined expression and interaction data reveal that OsCBL4-assembles with specific CIPKs into signaling modules during osmotic stress responses in rice, pointing to roles that go beyond salt stress responses. The findings establish a foundation for further functional dissection of CBL-CIPK pathway diversification in abiotic stress adaptation.