| Literature DB >> 34373603 |
Sahar Hani1, Laura Cuyas1,2, Pascale David1, David Secco3, James Whelan3, Marie-Christine Thibaud1, Rémy Merret4, Florian Mueller5, Nathalie Pochon1, Hélène Javot1, Orestis Faklaris6, Eric Maréchal7, Edouard Bertrand8,9,10, Laurent Nussaume11.
Abstract
Plants are constantly adapting to ambient fluctuations through spatial and temporal transcriptional responses. Here, we implemented the latest-generation RNA imaging system and combined it with microfluidics to visualize transcriptional regulation in living Arabidopsis plants. This enabled quantitative measurements of the transcriptional activity of single loci in single cells, in real time and under changing environmental conditions. Using phosphate-responsive genes as a model, we found that active genes displayed high transcription initiation rates (one initiation event every ~3 s) and frequently clustered together in endoreplicated cells. We observed gene bursting and large allelic differences in single cells, revealing that at steady state, intrinsic noise dominated extrinsic variations. Moreover, we established that transcriptional repression triggered in roots by phosphate, a crucial macronutrient limiting plant development, occurred with unexpectedly fast kinetics (on the order of minutes) and striking heterogeneity between neighbouring cells. Access to single-cell RNA polymerase II dynamics in live plants will benefit future studies of signalling processes.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34373603 DOI: 10.1038/s41477-021-00981-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Plants ISSN: 2055-0278 Impact factor: 15.793