“…The WRKY TFs show high binding affinity to the W-box sequence (T/C)TGAC(C/T) (Rushton et al, 2010). The WRKY TFs are known to play critical roles in biotic and abiotic stress responses, such as pathogen infection (Liu et al, 2005;Mao et al, 2011;Chen et al, 2013;Dey et al, 2014), high salt (Niu et al, 2012;Liang et al, 2017), drought stress (Luo et al, 2013;Sun et al, 2015;Li et al, 2017), oxidative stress , nutrient stress (Chen et al, 2009;Su et al, 2015;Dai et al, 2016) and high temperature (Cai et al, 2015;He et al, 2016). In addition to their important role in stress responses, WRKYs are also involved in a wide range of plant growth and development processes, such as seed dormancy and germination (Luo et al, 2005;Zhang et al, 2011;Ding et al, 2014), seed size (Gu et al, 2017), fruit maturation (Cheng et al, 2016;Ye et al, 2017) and senescence (Besseau et al, 2012;Meng et al, 2013).…”