89 research outputs found
Entrainment of Arabidopsis roots to the light:dark cycle by light piping
Correct operation of the plant circadian clock is crucial for optimal growth and development. Recent evidence has shown that the plant clock is tissue-specific and potentially hierarchical, implying that there are signalling mechanisms that can synchronise the clock in different tissues. Here I have addressed the mechanism that allows the shoot and root clocks to be synchronised in light:dark cycles but not in continuous light. Luciferase imaging data from two different Arabidopsis accessions with two different markers show that the period of the root clock is much less sensitive to blue light than to red light. Decapitated roots were imaged either in darkness or with the top section of root tissue exposed to light. Exposure to red light reduced the period of the root tissue maintained in darkness whereas exposure to blue light did not. The data indicate that light can be piped through root tissue to affect the circadian period of tissue in darkness. I propose that the synchronisation of shoots and roots in light:dark cycles is achieved by light piping from shoots to roots
The evening complex is central to the difference between the circadian clocks of Arabidopsis thaliana shoots and roots
The circadian clock regulates the timing of many aspects of plant physiology, and this requires entrainment of the clock to the prevailing day:night cycle. Different plant cells and tissues can oscillate with different freeârunning periods, so coordination of timing across the plant is crucial. Previous work showed that a major difference between the clock in mature shoots and roots involves light inputs. The objective of this work was to define, in Arabidopsis thaliana , the operation of the root clock in more detail, and in particular how it responds to light quality. Luciferase imaging was used to study the shoot and root clocks in several null mutants of clock components and in lines with aberrant expression of phytochromes. Mutations in each of the components of the evening complex (EARLY FLOWERING 3 and 4, and LUX ARRHYTHMO) were found to have specific effects on roots, by affecting either rhythmicity or period and its response to light quality. The data suggest that the evening complex is a key part of the light input mechanism that differs between shoots and roots and show that roots sense red light via phytochrome B
How does temperature affect splicing events? Isoform switching of splicing factors regulates splicing of <i>LATE ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL</i> (<i>LHY</i>)
One of the ways in which plants can respond to temperature is via alternative splicing (AS). Previous work showed that temperature changes affected the splicing of several circadian clock gene transcripts. Here we investigated the role of RNAâbinding splicing factors (SFs) in temperatureâsensitive alternative splicing (AS) of the clock gene LATE ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL (LHY). We characterised, in wild type plants, temperatureâassociated isoform switching and expression patterns for SF transcripts from a highâresolution temperature and time series RNAâseq experiment. In addition we employed quantitative RTâPCR of SF mutant plants to explore the role of the SFs in coolingâassociated AS of LHY. We show that the splicing and expression of several SFs responds sufficiently rapidly and sensitively to temperature changes to contribute to the splicing of the 5âUTR of LHY. Moreover the choice of splice site in LHY was altered in some SF mutants. The splicing of the 5âUTR region of LHY has characteristics of a molecular thermostat, where the ratio of transcript isoforms is sensitive to temperature changes as modest as 2°C and is scalable over a wide dynamic range of temperature. Our work provides novel insight into SFâmediated coupling of the perception of temperature to postâtranscriptional regulation of the clock
Cold-Dependent Expression and Alternative Splicing of Arabidopsis Long Non-coding RNAs
Plants re-program their gene expression when responding to changing environmental conditions. Besides differential gene expression, extensive alternative splicing (AS) of pre-mRNAs and changes in expression of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are associated with stress responses. RNA-sequencing of a diel time-series of the initial response of Arabidopsis thaliana rosettes to low temperature showed massive and rapid waves of both transcriptional and AS activity in protein-coding genes. We exploited the high diversity of transcript isoforms in AtRTD2 to examine regulation and post-transcriptional regulation of lncRNA gene expression in response to cold stress. We identified 135 lncRNA genes with cold-dependent differential expression (DE) and/or differential alternative splicing (DAS) of lncRNAs including natural antisense RNAs, sORF lncRNAs, and precursors of microRNAs (miRNAs) and trans-acting small-interfering RNAs (tasiRNAs). The high resolution (HR) of the time-series allowed the dynamics of changes in transcription and AS to be determined and identified early and adaptive transcriptional and AS changes in the cold response. Some lncRNA genes were regulated only at the level of AS and using plants grown at different temperatures and a HR time-course of the first 3 h of temperature reduction, we demonstrated that the AS of some lncRNAs is highly sensitive to small temperature changes suggesting tight regulation of expression. In particular, a splicing event in TAS1a which removed an intron that contained the miR173 processing and phased siRNAs generation sites was differentially alternatively spliced in response to cold. The cold-induced reduction of the spliced form of TAS1a and of the tasiRNAs suggests that splicing may enhance production of the siRNAs. Our results identify candidate lncRNAs that may contribute to the regulation of expression that determines the physiological processes essential for acclimation and freezing tolerance
AtRTD - a comprehensive reference transcript dataset resource for accurate quantification of transcript - specific expression in <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i>
RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) allows global gene expression analysis at the individual transcript level. Accurate quantification of transcript variants generated by alternative splicing (AS) remains a challenge. We have developed a comprehensive, nonredundant Arabidopsis reference transcript dataset (AtRTD) containing over 74 000 transcripts for use with algorithms to quantify AS transcript isoforms in RNA-seq. The AtRTD was formed by merging transcripts from TAIR10 and novel transcripts identified in an AS discovery project. We have estimated transcript abundance in RNA-seq data using the transcriptome-based alignment-free programmes Sailfish and Salmon and have validated quantification of splicing ratios from RNA-seq by high resolution reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (HR RT-PCR). Good correlations between splicing ratios from RNA-seq and HR RT-PCR were obtained demonstrating the accuracy of abundances calculated for individual transcripts in RNA-seq. The AtRTD is a resource that will have immediate utility in analysing Arabidopsis RNA-seq data to quantify differential transcript abundance and expression.</p
A high quality Arabidopsis transcriptome for accurate transcript-level analysis of alternative splicing
Alternative splicing generates multiple transcript and protein isoforms from the same gene and thus is important in gene expression regulation. To date, RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) is the standard method for quantifying changes in alternative splicing on a genome-wide scale. Understanding the current limitations of RNA-seq is crucial for reliable analysis and the lack of high quality, comprehensive transcriptomes for most species, including model organisms such as Arabidopsis, is a major constraint in accurate quantification of transcript isoforms. To address this, we designed a novel pipeline with stringent filters and assembled a comprehensive Reference Transcript Dataset for Arabidopsis (AtRTD2) containing 82,190 non-redundant transcripts from 34 212 genes. Extensive experimental validation showed that AtRTD2 and its modified version, AtRTD2-QUASI, for use in Quantification of Alternatively Spliced Isoforms, outperform other available transcriptomes in RNA-seq analysis. This strategy can be implemented in other species to build a pipeline for transcript-level expression and alternative splicing analyses
Organ specificity in the plant circadian system is explained by different light inputs to the shoot and root clocks
Circadian clocks allow the temporal compartmentalisation of biological processes. In Arabidopsis circadian rhythms display organ specificity but the underlying molecular causes have not been identified. We investigated the mechanisms responsible for the similarities and differences between the clocks of mature shoots and roots in constant conditions and in light:dark cycles.
We developed an imaging system to monitor clock gene expression in shoots and light- or dark-grown roots, modified a recent mathematical model of the Arabidopsis clock and used this to simulate our new data.
We showed that the shoot and root circadian clocks have different rhythmic properties (period and amplitude) and respond differently to light quality. The root clock was entrained by direct exposure to low-intensity light, even in antiphase to the illumination of shoots. Differences between the clocks were more pronounced in conditions where light is present than in constant darkness, and persisted in the presence of sucrose. We simulated the data successfully by modifying those parameters of a clock model that are related to light inputs.
We conclude that differences and similarities between the shoot and root clocks can largely be explained by organ-specific light inputs. This provides mechanistic insight into the developing field of organ-specific clocks
The regulation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase in CAM plants
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase catalyses the primary assimilation of CO2 in Crassulacean acid metabolism plants. It is activated by phosphorylation, and this plays a major role in setting the dayânight pattern of metabolism in these plants. The key factor that controls the phosphorylation state of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase is the activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase kinase. Recent work on Crassulacean acid metabolism plants has established this enzyme as a novel protein kinase and has provided new insights into the regulation of protein phosphorylation. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase kinase is controlled by synthesis and degradation in response to a circadian oscillator. The circadian control of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase kinase can be overridden by changes in metabolite levels. The primary effect of the circadian oscillator in this system may be at the level of the tonoplast, and changes in kinase expression may be secondary to circadian changes in the concentration of a metabolite, perhaps cytosolic malate
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