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The coordinated regulation of early meiotic stages is dominated by non-coding RNAs and stage-specific transcription in wheat

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posted on 2023-05-16, 11:14 authored by Yunfei Jiang, Amidou N'Diaye, Chu Shin Koh, Teagen D Quilichini, Arun SK Shunmugam, Morgan W Kirzinger, David Konkin, Yasmina Bekkaoui, Ehsan Sari, Asher Pasha, Eddi Esteban, Nicholas J Provart, James D Higgins, Kevin Rozwadowski, Andrew G Sharpe, Curtis J Pozniak, Sateesh Kagale

Reproductive success hinges on precisely coordinated meiosis, yet our understanding of how structural rearrangements of chromatin and phase transitions during meiosis are transcriptionally regulated is limited. In crop plants, detailed analysis of the meiotic transcriptome could identify regulatory genes and epigenetic regulators that can be targeted to increase recombination rates and broaden genetic variation, as well as provide a resource for comparison among eukaryotes of different taxa to answer outstanding questions about meiosis. We conducted a meiotic stage-specific analysis of messenger RNA (mRNA), small non-coding RNA (sncRNA), and long intervening/intergenic non-coding RNA (lincRNA) in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and revealed novel mechanisms of meiotic transcriptional regulation and meiosis-specific transcripts. Amidst general repression of mRNA expression, significant enrichment of ncRNAs was identified during prophase I relative to vegetative cells. The core meiotic transcriptome was comprised of 9309 meiosis-specific transcripts, 48 134 previously unannotated meiotic transcripts, and many known and novel ncRNAs differentially expressed at specific stages. The abundant meiotic sncRNAs controlled the reprogramming of central metabolic pathways by targeting genes involved in photosynthesis, glycolysis, hormone biosynthesis, and cellular homeostasis, and lincRNAs enhanced the expression of nearby genes. Alternative splicing was not evident in this polyploid species, but isoforms were switched at phase transitions. The novel, stage-specific regulatory controls uncovered here challenge the conventional understanding of this crucial biological process and provide a new resource of requisite knowledge for those aiming to directly modulate meiosis to improve crop plants. The wheat meiosis transcriptome dataset can be queried for genes of interest using an eFP browser located at https://bar.utoronto.ca/efp_wheat/cgi-bin/efpWeb.cgi?dataSource=Wheat_Meiosis.

Funding

Genome Canada. Grant Number: CTAG2

Genome Prairie

Western Grains Research Foundation

Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture

Saskatchewan Wheat Development Commission

Alberta Wheat and Barley Development Commission

National Research Council Canada

Global Institute for Food Security Plant Improvement Program

Canada First Research Excellence Fund

University of Saskatchewan

History

Author affiliation

Department of Genetics and Genome Biology, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

The Plant Journal

Volume

114

Issue

1

Pagination

209 - 224

Publisher

Wiley

issn

0960-7412

eissn

1365-313X

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-05-16

Language

en

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