Tight association of genome rearrangements with gene expression in conifer plastomes

Abstract Background Our understanding of plastid transcriptomes is limited to a few model plants whose plastid genomes (plastomes) have a highly conserved gene order. Consequently, little is known about how gene expression changes in response to genomic rearrangements in plastids. This is particular...

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Main Authors: Chung-Shien Wu, Edi Sudianto, Shu-Miaw Chaw
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-01-01
Series:BMC Plant Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-020-02809-2
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spelling doaj-0351ced4165741b3b7361d3ef315c3952021-01-10T12:25:58ZengBMCBMC Plant Biology1471-22292021-01-012111810.1186/s12870-020-02809-2Tight association of genome rearrangements with gene expression in conifer plastomesChung-Shien Wu0Edi Sudianto1Shu-Miaw Chaw2Biodiversity Research Center, Academia SinicaBiodiversity Research Center, Academia SinicaBiodiversity Research Center, Academia SinicaAbstract Background Our understanding of plastid transcriptomes is limited to a few model plants whose plastid genomes (plastomes) have a highly conserved gene order. Consequently, little is known about how gene expression changes in response to genomic rearrangements in plastids. This is particularly important in the highly rearranged conifer plastomes. Results We sequenced and reported the plastomes and plastid transcriptomes of six conifer species, representing all six extant families. Strand-specific RNAseq data show a nearly full transcription of both plastomic strands and detect C-to-U RNA-editing sites at both sense and antisense transcripts. We demonstrate that the expression of plastid coding genes is strongly functionally dependent among conifer species. However, the strength of this association declines as the number of plastomic rearrangements increases. This finding indicates that plastomic rearrangement influences gene expression. Conclusions Our data provide the first line of evidence that plastomic rearrangements not only complicate the plastomic architecture but also drive the dynamics of plastid transcriptomes in conifers.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-020-02809-2ConiferPlastid transcriptomePlastomic rearrangementStrand-specific RNAseqRNA-editing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chung-Shien Wu
Edi Sudianto
Shu-Miaw Chaw
spellingShingle Chung-Shien Wu
Edi Sudianto
Shu-Miaw Chaw
Tight association of genome rearrangements with gene expression in conifer plastomes
BMC Plant Biology
Conifer
Plastid transcriptome
Plastomic rearrangement
Strand-specific RNAseq
RNA-editing
author_facet Chung-Shien Wu
Edi Sudianto
Shu-Miaw Chaw
author_sort Chung-Shien Wu
title Tight association of genome rearrangements with gene expression in conifer plastomes
title_short Tight association of genome rearrangements with gene expression in conifer plastomes
title_full Tight association of genome rearrangements with gene expression in conifer plastomes
title_fullStr Tight association of genome rearrangements with gene expression in conifer plastomes
title_full_unstemmed Tight association of genome rearrangements with gene expression in conifer plastomes
title_sort tight association of genome rearrangements with gene expression in conifer plastomes
publisher BMC
series BMC Plant Biology
issn 1471-2229
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Background Our understanding of plastid transcriptomes is limited to a few model plants whose plastid genomes (plastomes) have a highly conserved gene order. Consequently, little is known about how gene expression changes in response to genomic rearrangements in plastids. This is particularly important in the highly rearranged conifer plastomes. Results We sequenced and reported the plastomes and plastid transcriptomes of six conifer species, representing all six extant families. Strand-specific RNAseq data show a nearly full transcription of both plastomic strands and detect C-to-U RNA-editing sites at both sense and antisense transcripts. We demonstrate that the expression of plastid coding genes is strongly functionally dependent among conifer species. However, the strength of this association declines as the number of plastomic rearrangements increases. This finding indicates that plastomic rearrangement influences gene expression. Conclusions Our data provide the first line of evidence that plastomic rearrangements not only complicate the plastomic architecture but also drive the dynamics of plastid transcriptomes in conifers.
topic Conifer
Plastid transcriptome
Plastomic rearrangement
Strand-specific RNAseq
RNA-editing
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-020-02809-2
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