| Literature DB >> 27820840 |
Aobo Huang1,2, Yuying Sang3, Wenfeng Sun2, Ying Fu1, Zhenbiao Yang2,4.
Abstract
The internal C:N balance must be tightly controlled for the normal growth and development of plants. However, the underlying mechanisms, by which plants sense and balance the intracellular C:N status correspondingly to exogenous C:N availabilities remain elusive. In this study, we use comparative gene expression analysis to identify genes that are responsive to imbalanced C:N treatments in the aerial parts of rice seedlings. Transcripts of rice seedlings treated with four C:N availabilities (1:1, 1:60, 60:1 and 60:60) were compared and two groups of genes were classified: high C:low N responsive genes and low C:high N responsive genes. Our analysis identified several functional correlated genes including chalcone synthase (CHS), chlorophyll a-b binding protein (CAB) and other genes that are implicated in C:N balancing mechanism, such as alternative oxidase 1B (OsAOX1B), malate dehydrogenase (OsMDH) and lysine and histidine specific transporter 1 (OsLHT1). Additionally, six jasmonate synthetic genes and key regulatory genes involved in abiotic and biotic stresses, such as OsMYB4, autoinhibited calcium ATPase 3 (OsACA3) and pleiotropic drug resistance 9 (OsPDR9), were differentially expressed under high C:low N treatment. Gene ontology analysis showed that high C:low N up-regulated genes were primarily enriched in fatty acid biosynthesis and defense responses. Coexpression network analysis of these genes identified eight jasmonate ZIM domain protein (OsJAZ) genes and several defense response related regulators, suggesting that high C:low N status may act as a stress condition, which induces defense responses mediated by jasmonate signaling pathway. Our transcriptome analysis shed new light on the C:N balancing mechanisms and revealed several important regulators of C:N status in rice seedlings.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27820840 PMCID: PMC5098742 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0165732
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Experimental design to identify genes responsive to imbalanced C:N.
(A) N starved rice seedlings were treated with four different C:N conditions: balanced C:N (1:1 and 60:60) or imbalanced C:N (1:60 and 60:1). (B) Hypothetical models of genes responsive to exogenous imbalanced C:N conditions. Genes responsive to imbalanced high C:low N (60:1) or low C:high N (1:60) are proposed to show higher or lower expression levels compared with 1:1 and 60:60 treatments.
Fig 2qRT-PCR analysis of CN metabolic genes at different time points after C:N treatments.
Expression patterns of NR, GOGAT, GS, PEPCase and PK were analyzed in rice seedlings treated with four different C:N conditions (A 1:1; B 1:60; C 60:1; D 60:60) for 1, 2, 3 and 4 h. The beginning of the treatment (0 h) was used as the control and Actin6 served as the internal reference. Values are shown as means ± SDs from three technical replicates. A representative experiment of two biological replicates is shown.
Fig 3Identification of genes responsive to imbalanced high C:low N and low C:high N.
(A-D) The Volcano Plots for differentially expressed genes between treatments. The two vertical lines are the 1.5-fold change boundaries and the horizontal lines are the statistical significance boundaries (p<0.05). Genes with fold change>1.5 and statistical significance are marked with red dots. A, 60:1 compared with 1:1; B, 60:60 compared with 60:1; C, 1:60 compared with 1:1; D, 60:60 compared with 1:60. (E) Venn diagram of rice genes (probe sets) responded to C:N treatments. (F-H) Hierarchical cluster analysis of high C:low N and low C:high N responsive genes. The log2 ratio values of probe sets were used for the analysis with R software. The colored bars represent the value (log2(fold change)) of the transcripts in each bin after C:N treatments. Green represents down-regulated probe sets, red represents up-regulated probe sets, and dark indicates no significant difference in gene expression. F, High C:low N up-regulated genes; G, High C:low N down-regulated genes; H, Low C:high N up-regulated genes. “vs” represents “compared with”.
Annotations of genes responsive to imbalanced high C:low N and low C:high N.
| Description | Transcription factor | Name | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leucine rich repeat, N-terminal domain containing protein. | |||
| Lysine and histidine specific transporter. | |||
| Jacalin-like lectin domain containing protein. | |||
| Ras-related protein Rab11C. | |||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| Protein of unknown function DUF563 family protein. | |||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| Plasma membrane Ca2+-ATPase. | |||
| Allyl alcohol dehydrogenase. | |||
| Zn-finger, RING domain containing protein. | |||
| Lipoxygenase, chloroplast precursor (EC 1.13.11.12). | |||
| ZIM domain containing protein. | |||
| Protein of unknown function DUF1677 family protein | |||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| ZIM domain containing protein. | |||
| Oxo-phytodienoic acid reductase. | |||
| Sialyltransferase. | |||
| Pectinesterase (EC 3.1.1.11) (Pectin methylesterase). | |||
| Transferase family protein. | |||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| Multidrug resistance protein 1 homolog. | |||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| Pathogen-related protein. | |||
| Hypothetical protein. | |||
| Photosystem II complex PsbP family protein. | |||
| B12D family protein. | |||
| Indole-3-glycerol phosphate synthase (IGPS). | |||
| Inwardly rectifying potassium channel. | |||
| Protein of unknown function DUF296 family protein. | |||
| Oxo-phytodienoic acid reductase. | |||
| Oxo-phytodienoic acid reductase. | |||
| WRKY transcription factor. | WRKY | ||
| Alternative oxidase. | |||
| Zn-finger, C2H2 type domain containing protein. | C2H2 | ||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| Basic helix-loop-helix region containing protein. | bHLH | ||
| Cytochrome P450 family protein. | |||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| Myb protein. | MYB | ||
| Harpin-induced 1 domain containing protein. | |||
| Naringenin-chalcone synthase family protein. | |||
| Phytochelatin synthetase. | |||
| Glucosyltransferase like protein. | |||
| Non-protein coding transcript, unclassifiable transcript. | |||
| Protein of unknown function DUF266 family protein. | |||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| FYVE/PHD zinc finger domain containing protein. | |||
| Hypothetical protein. | |||
| Proteinase inhibitor I20, Pin2 family protein. | |||
| Allene oxide synthase (EC 4.2.1.92). | |||
| (No Hit) | |||
| Malate dehydrogenase precursor (EC 1.1.1.37). | |||
| Flavanone 3-hydroxylase. | |||
| Chalcone synthase (EC 2.3.1.74). | |||
| Hypothetical protein. | |||
| PDR-like ABC transporter. | |||
| L-ascorbate oxidase precursor (Ascorbase) (ASO). | |||
| Lipoxygenase, chloroplast precursor (EC 1.13.11.12). | |||
| 1-deoxy-D-xylulose 5-phosphate synthase 2 precursor. | |||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| AAA ATPase, central region domain containing protein. | |||
| Hypothetical protein. | |||
| Non-protein coding transcript, uncharacterized transcript. | |||
| (No Hit) | |||
| Hypothetical protein. | |||
| Metallophosphoesterase domain containing protein. | |||
| IQ calmodulin-binding region domain containing protein. | |||
| Plant protein of unknown function family protein. | |||
| Hypothetical protein. | |||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| Integrase, catalytic region domain containing protein. | |||
| Hypothetical protein. | |||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| Curculin-like lectin domain containing protein. | |||
| Conserved hypothetical protein. | |||
| (No Hit) | |||
| NOT2/NOT3/NOT5 family protein. | |||
| (No Hit) | |||
| PAP/25A core domain containing protein. | |||
| (No Hit) | |||
| GRAS transcription factor domain containing protein. | GRAS | ||
| Membrane attack complex component C9 family protein. | |||
| Chlorophyll a-b binding protein 2 (LHCII type I CAB-2). | |||
| Protein of unknown function DUF1334 family protein. | |||
| (No Hit) | |||
| (No Hit) | |||
| RNA-binding region RNP-1 domain containing protein. | |||
| Peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7). | |||
| Peptidase S10, serine carboxypeptidase family protein. |
Fig 4Validation of microarray results by qRT-PCR.
(A) OsLOX; (B) OsAOS2; (C) OsOPR5; (D) OsCHS; (E) OsCAB2; (F) OsPERO. Actin6 was used as the internal reference. The gray bars indicated the fold change of the genes between treatments (1:60, 60:1 and 60:60) and the control (1:1). Values are shown as means ± SDs from three technical replicates. A representative experiment of two biological replicates is shown.
Fig 5Gene ontology (GO) enrichment analysis of genes up-regulated by high C:low N.
The differentially expressed probe sets were analyzed by SEA (singular enrichment analysis) using AgriGO, and the comparison is displayed in graphical mode. Each box contains GO term number, the false discovery rate (FDR) value, GO term and item number associated with the GO term in the query list and background as well as total number of query list and background. The degree of color saturation of a box is positively correlated to the enrichment level of the term (the yellow-to-red represents the term is up-regulated while non-significant terms are shown as white boxes). Solid, dashed and dotted lines represent two, one and zero enriched terms at both ends connected by the line, respectively. (A) Biological process category analysis of high C:low N up-regulated genes; (B) Molecular function category analysis of high C:low N up-regulated genes; (C) List of screened genes in “fatty acid biosynthesis”, “defense response” and “oxidoreductase activity” categories with p-values.
Fig 6Coexpression network analysis of high C:low N up-regulated genes.
(A) Module 1 extracted from coexpression analysis using 14 microarray identified genes. (B) Module 2 extracted from coexpression analysis using 9 microarray identified genes. Red and blue nodes indicate high C:low N up-regulated genes and the red ones are transcription factors. Other genes with known names or encode for transcription factors are marked on the nodes. Genes involved into KEGG pathways are marked with color dots beneath the nodes and the detailed information are listed on the tables.