| Literature DB >> 21106056 |
Reena Narsai1, Ian Castleden, James Whelan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Arabidopsis thaliana is clearly established as the model plant species. Given the ever-growing demand for food, there is a need to translate the knowledge learned in Arabidopsis to agronomically important species, such as rice (Oryza sativa). To gain a comparative insight into the similarities and differences into how organs are built and how plants respond to stress, the transcriptomes of Arabidopsis and rice were compared at the level of gene orthology and functional categorisation.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21106056 PMCID: PMC3095337 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2229-10-262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Plant Biol ISSN: 1471-2229 Impact factor: 4.215
Overview of the 366 Affymetrix rice genome microarrays and 177 Affymetrix Arabidopsis genome arrays used for the global analysis in this study.
| Sample details | GEO/AT-EXP | Rep | No. Arrays | Tissue | Publications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dry seed and aerobic germination (up to 24 h) cv. Amaroo | E-MEXP-1766 | 3 | 15 | Dry and germinating seed | [ |
| Dry seed and anaerobic germination (up to 24 h) and switch conditions cv. Amaroo | E-MEXP-2267 | 3 | 36 | Imbibed seed | [ |
| Aerobic and anaerobic grown coleoptiles cv. Nipponbare | GSE6908 | 2 | 4 | Coleoptile | [ |
| Embryo, endosperm, leaf and root from 7-d seedling, 10 d seedling cv. Zhonghua | GSE11966 | 2 | 10 | Embryo, endosperm, leaf and root from 7-d seedling, 10-d seedling | [ |
| Stigma, Ovary cv. Nipponbare | GSE7951 | 3 | 6 | Stigma, ovary | [ |
| Mature leaf, young leaf, semi apical meristem, inflorescence, seed cv. IR64 | GSE6893 | 3 | 45 | Mature leaf, young leaf, semi apical meristem, inflorescence, seed | [ |
| Drought, salt, cold stress cv. IR64 | GSE6901 | 3 | 12 | Seedling | [ |
| Heat stress cv. Zhonghua | GSE14275 | 3 | 6 | Seedling | [ |
| Salt stress on 2 cultivars; indica, FL478 (salt tolerant), indica, IR29 (salt sensitive) | GSE3053 | 3 | 11 | Crown and growing point | [ |
| Salt stress on 4 cultivars; japonica, m103 (salt sensitive), indica, IR29 (salt sensitive), japonica, Agami (salt tolerant), indica, IR63731 (salt tolerant) | GSE4438 | 3 | 24 | Panicle initiation stage | [ |
| Salt stress on root using 4 cultivars; FL478 (salt tolerant), IR29 (salt sensitive), IR63731 (salt tolerant), Pokkali (salt tolerant) | GSE14403 | 3 | 23 | Root | - |
| Fe and P treatments cv. Nipponbare | GSE17245 | 2 | 16 | Root | [ |
| Arsenate treatment cv. Azucena | GSE4471 | 3 | 12 | Seedling | [ |
| Physical stress at roots tips cv. Bala | GSE10857 | 3 | 12 | Root tip | [ |
| GSE10373 | 2 | 24 | Root | [ | |
| GSE7256 | 2 | 8 | Leaf | [ | |
| Rice stripe virus infection cv. WuYun3, KT95-418 | GSE11025 | 3 | 12 | Seedling | - |
| Infection with bacteria | GSE16793 | 4 | 60 | Whole-plant tissue | - |
| Cytokinin treatment on root and leaf cv. Nipponbare | GSE6719 | 3 | 24 | Root, 2-week old seedlings | [ |
| Indole-3-actetic acid and benzyl aminopurine treatment cv. IR64 | GSE5167 | 2 | 6 | Seedling | [ |
| AtGenExpress developmental tissue microarray dataset (wildtype only) | E-AFMX-9 | 3 | 147 | Wild type, different tissues | [ |
| AtGenExpress global stress expression dataset (wildtype) | GSE5620, GSE5624, GSE5623, GSE5621, GSE5628 | 2 | 30 | Wild type, shoots | [ |
The microarray experiments are classified as development/tissue, abiotic stress, biotic stress or hormone treatment respectively depending on the purpose of the experiment. For each microarray set in each experiment an experimental description is given with the respective cultivar (cv.) indicated, public Gene Expression Omnibus (GSE) identifier or MIAME Genexpress identifier (E-MEXP), the number of biological replications carried out (Reps), the number of arrays carried out in that experiment, the tissues analysed are described and a reference (if published) is shown.
Figure 1Global expression analysis of rice transcriptome datasets. A) Expression of the 57,302 probesets defined as the genome were classified as always expressed, never expressed, showing specific expression or non-specific expression based on MAS5.0 normalised microarray data. A probeset was considered to be expressed if it was called present in >/= 2 replicates in at least one sample. B) The proportion of rice transcripts that have Arabidopsis orthologues (determined by Inparanoid database v7.0) is indicated by the darker shade of colour for each subset. Significant (z-score, p < 0.01) enrichment/depletion of orthologues in each sub-set compared to the genome proportion is denoted with a red/blue ^, respectively. B) Analysis of FUNcational CATalogue (FUNCAT) was carried out on each set of genes. Subsets that were enriched or depleted in that FUNCAT compared to the genome are indicated by the red or blue asterisk respectively.
Figure 2Summary of transcripts that display development or tissue specific detection. A) For each tissue and/or developmental stage (seed, leaf root and flower) the number of probesets expressed exclusively in one or more of the developmental stages for that tissue is shown e.g. present at one or more stage of inflorescence. The numbers in brackets indicates the number of probesets with known TIGR6 identifiers for rice or known TAIR9 AGIs for Arabidopsis. B) For each of the tissues, the probesets with annotated TIGR identifiers or AGIs for rice and Arabidopsis respectively, were analysed for orthologues that displayed the same type of restricted expression profile. Orthologues were determined based on the Inparanoid database v7.0 [30]. Overlap in the Venn diagram indicates the number of genes that were orthologous and tissue specific in both species e.g. 5 orthologous, flower specific genes. The number in the darker shades represent the number of orthologues that exist, but are not tissue specific in the respective other species. Lastly, the number in the lightest shade represents the number of genes that have no orthologues, with the number of lineage specific genes shown in the black circle (lineage specific was defined in [32]). C) The AGI, TIGR identifiers and description of each gene in the overlapping sets are also shown. D) PageMan analysis of the genes showing tissue specific expression. For each set of genes that showed tissue specific expression (e.g. all 231 leaf specific genes for rice), statistical analysis of over-represented functional categories was carried out using the Fisher method. Functional categories that did not show significant changes were collapsed for display. Statistical significances are represented by a false colour heat map (up, red; down, blue) where a z-score of 1.96 represents a p-value of 0.05.
Figure 3Defining common and exclusive stress responsive genes. The number of genes significantly (p < 0.05, PPDE > 0.96) differentially expressed in rice and Arabidopsis under drought, salt, cold and heat treated plants are shown on the right of each column. For each stress responsive sub-set of genes, the proportion of transcripts that i) have orthologous genes responding in a similar way (Up/Down-regulated in A & R; red/blue), ii) have orthologous genes responding in an opposite manner (e.g. up-regulated in rice and down-regulated in Arabidopsis; denoted Opposite response; purple), iii) have orthologous genes unchanging in the respective other species and iv) do not have orthologues (grey) is shown. The total number of genes in each sub-set is also shown next to each of the bars.
Figure 4Pageman analysis of microarray data in response to abiotic stress. For each abiotic stress experiment in rice and Arabidopsis, the significant fold-changes for the entire set of differentially expressed genes were analysed using the PageMan tool. Statistical analysis of over-represented functional categories was carried out using the Fisher method. Functional categories that did not show significant changes were collapsed for display. Statistical significances are represented by a false colour heat map (up, red; down, blue) where a z-score of 1.96 represents a p-value of 0.05.
Figure 5Visualisation of transcripts showing differential regulation between Arabidopsis and rice. A) Transcripts encoding proteins involved in redox functions, including the ascorbate glutathione cycle components, were visualised on a custom pathway image. The log2 fold change is shown for the control vs. treated as a heatmap for rice and Arabidopsis in response to cold, heat conditions. Transcripts showing an opposite response under cold conditions (pink boxes) and heat conditions (green boxes) are indicated. APX-Ascorbate Peroxidase, MDHAR-Monodehydroascrobate Reductase, DHAR-Dehydroascorbate Reductase, GR-Glutathione Reductase. B) Phylogenetic analysis of non-symbiotic hemoglobin encoding genes in rice and Arabidopsis. Fold changes in response to each abiotic stress is indicated within the coloured boxes (Drought - Blue, Salt - yellow, Cold - pink, Green - heat) where the colour of the font indicates up-regulation (red) or down-regulation (blue).
Figure 6Core stress responsive gene expression. The transcripts significantly (p < 0.05, PPDE > 0.96) increasing or decreasing in abundance in rice and Arabidopsis under drought, salt, cold and heat treated plants were overlapped based on their common response (Abiotic core - UP, DOWN, respectively). A) Genes which were part of these Abiotic core sets for rice and Arabidopsis were overlapped again in order to determine the number of transcripts with no orthologues (lightest gray shade), with known orthologues (darker gray shade) and the number of transcripts which were orthologous and showing a common (overlap) or opposite (overlap) response across all 4 abiotic stresses. ii) For each of the common and oppositely responding transcripts, the log2 fold change is shown for the control vs. treated as a heatmap, where red represents up-regulation and blue represents down-regulation. For Arabidopsis, only a single time point is shown, depending on which time point comparison was significant (Methods section). Genes indicated in bold were also analysed by qRT-PCR (as shown below). B) qRT-PCR results showing the log2 fold changes of 16 rice genes and 16 Arabidopsis genes in response to cold (dark red) and heat (green) stress. Note that these 16 genes represent orthologous genes in Arabidopsis and rice. The log2 fold changes based on the microarray data is also presented for comparison.
Figure 7Analysis of changes in transcript abundance for genes encoding transcription factors. All the genes encoding transcription factors were collated for Arabidopsis and rice and the distribution of these transcription factor families changing in abundance within the total stress responsive sets were examined for A) drought (blue), B) salt (yellow), C) cold (pink) and D) heat (green). The distribution of transcripts encoding transcription factors in each family, within is stress responsive subset (e.g. Up drought) was compared to the percentage present in the respective genome. In this way, over/under-represented transcription factor families within each subset could be determined for Arabidopsis and rice separately. Over- or under-representation is indicated by red or blue asterisk respectively (at p < 0.01). Note that some transcription factor families were statistically significant at p < 0.025, these are indicated by ^. The % breakdown of each family within each subset is shown next to the genome (lighter shades - Arabidopsis, darker shades (rice).
Figure 8Analysis of putative motifs for core orthologous genes showing common response under abiotic stress. A) The occurrence of all possible 6-mers was calculated in each of the core orthologous up-regulated subsets for rice and Arabidopsis. The occurrence of each motif in a subset was made relative to the occurrence of that motif in all promoters in the respective genomes. Heat map intensity represents over (red) or under (blue) representation of putative motifs compared to the genome. From the 4,096 possible 6-mers, only the putative motifs present 20% more or less often than the percentage presence in the genome were visualised e.g. a value of 1.2 indicates that this motif in the respective subset occurs 20% more than the occurrence of this motif in the genome, whilst a value of 0.8 indicates that this motifs occurs 20% less than the percentage occurrence in the genome. Examples of conserved over-represented motifs within different stress subsets are indicated in the black boxes. B) The top 3 over-represented motifs from each of the up-regulated subsets are indicated on the heatmap by the coloured boxes. Note that motifs over-represented in the UP and DOWN regulated sets are indicated by an asterisk *. For the motifs representing known TF binding sites, the respective TF is annotated; the number in brackets indicates the associated reference. C) Examination of over/under-represented known 3'UTR motifs in each subset. Note that the number in brackets indicates the associated reference.