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Changes in ambient temperature are the prevailing cue in determining Brachypodium distachyon diurnal gene regulation

bioRxiv, ISSN: 2692-8205
2019
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  • Citations
    3
    • Citation Indexes
      3
      • CrossRef
        3

Article Description

Plants are continuously exposed to diurnal fluctuations in light and temperature, and spontaneous changes in their physical or biotic environment. The circadian clock coordinates regulation of gene expression with a 24-hour period, enabling the anticipation of these events.We used RNA sequencing to characterize the Brachypodium distachyon transcriptome under light and temperature cycles, as well as under constant conditions.Approximately 3% of the transcriptome was regulated by the circadian clock, a smaller proportion reported in most other species. For most transcripts that were rhythmic under all conditions, including many known clock genes, the period of gene expression lengthened from 24 to 27 h in the absence of external cues. To functionally characterize the cyclic transcriptome in B. distachyon, we used Gene Ontology enrichment analysis, and found several terms significantly associated with peak expression at particular times of the day. Furthermore we identified sequence motifs enriched in the promoters of similarly-phased genes, some potentially associated with transcription factors.When considering the overlap in rhythmic gene expression and specific pathway behavior, thermocycles was the prevailing cue that controlled diurnal gene regulation. Taken together, our characterization of the rhythmic B. distachyon transcriptome represents a foundational resource with implications in other grass species.

Bibliographic Details

Kirk J.M. MacKinnon; Chang Yu; Joshua H. Coomey; Samuel P. Hazen; Benjamin J. Cole; Marie Stanislas Remigereau; Tomás Duffy; Steve A. Kay; Nolan T. Hartwick; Todd P. Michael

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology; Agricultural and Biological Sciences; Immunology and Microbiology; Neuroscience; Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics

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