Abstract:
Tea  (
Camellia  sinensis
  L.  (O)  Kuntze)  is  one  of  the  most  widely  consumed  beverages  
worldwide.  Tea  growing  areas  in  Kenya  often  experience  drought  periods  which  cause  
accumulated soil water deficit. These adversely affect tea production and hence necessitate 
a  need  to  develop  drought-adapted  tea  cultivars  that  can  withstand  the  stress  challenge.  
Development  of  such  cultivars  can  be  facilitated  by  better  understanding  of  genetic  
mechanisms  underlying  tolerance  of  the  tea  plant  to  water  deficit.  Tea  plants  respond  
to  water  deficit  through  poorly  understood  molecular  processes.  The  present  study  was  
therefore, designed with the objective of identifying genes putatively conferring tolerance 
in  the  tea  plant.  Drought  tolerant  (TRFCA  SFS150)  and  susceptible  (AHP  S15/10)  
tea cultivars, both 18-month old, were each separately exposed to water stress or control 
conditions  of  18%  and  34%  soil  moisture  content,  respectively,  for  three  months  in  a  
randomized complete block (RCB) design with three replicates. Fresh shoots (
n
 = 5) were 
randomly selected and separately harvested from each treatment and replicate. Total RNA 
of  the  shoots  were  extracted,  their  mRNA  reverse  transcribed  and  sequenced  on  Roche  
454  high-throughput  pyrosequencing  platform.  Overall,  232,853  reads  were  generated.  
The reads were quality-filtered, trimmed and assembled into 460 long transcripts (contigs). 
Contigs were annotated using BLAST searches against similar proteins in the Arabidopsis 
proteome  and  blast2go  against  non-redundant  database  to  determine  gene  ontologies.  
Drought-related  genes  including  heat  shock  proteins  (HSP70),  superoxide  dismutase  
(SOD), catalase (cat), peroxidase (PoX), calmoduline-like protein (Cam7) and galactinol 
synthase (
Gols4
) were induced in plants exposed to drought. Additionally, the expressions 
of  HSP70  and  SOD  were  higher  in  the  drought  tolerant  relative  to  the  susceptible  
cultivar  under  drought  conditions.  Loci  with  known  functional  links  to  physiological  
and biochemical features of drought response appear to mediate tolerance to drought in 
C.  sinensis.  
The  loci  present  potential  molecular  markers  for  drought  tolerance  that  can  
be  explored  through  functional  genomics  to  better  understand  molecular  mechanisms  underlying drought tolerance in 
C. sinensis