PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Splicing-related genes are alternatively spliced upon changes in ambient temperatures in plants.

  • Leonie Verhage,
  • Edouard I Severing,
  • Johan Bucher,
  • Michiel Lammers,
  • Jacqueline Busscher-Lange,
  • Guusje Bonnema,
  • Nicole Rodenburg,
  • Marcel C G Proveniers,
  • Gerco C Angenent,
  • Richard G H Immink

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0172950
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. e0172950

Abstract

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Plants adjust their development and architecture to small variations in ambient temperature. In a time in which temperatures are rising world-wide, the mechanism by which plants are able to sense temperature fluctuations and adapt to it, is becoming of special interest. By performing RNA-sequencing on two Arabidopsis accession and one Brassica species exposed to temperature alterations, we showed that alternative splicing is an important mechanism in ambient temperature sensing and adaptation. We found that amongst the differentially alternatively spliced genes, splicing related genes are enriched, suggesting that the splicing machinery itself is targeted for alternative splicing when temperature changes. Moreover, we showed that many different components of the splicing machinery are targeted for ambient temperature regulated alternative splicing. Mutant analysis of a splicing related gene that was differentially spliced in two of the genotypes showed an altered flowering time response to different temperatures. We propose a two-step mechanism where temperature directly influences alternative splicing of the splicing machinery genes, followed by a second step where the altered splicing machinery affects splicing of downstream genes involved in the adaptation to altered temperatures.