Dynamic regulation of genome-wide pre-mRNA splicing and stress tolerance by the Sm-like protein LSm5 in Arabidopsis
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
Abstract
Sm-like proteins are highly conserved proteins that form the core of the U6 ribonucleoprotein and function in several mRNA metabolism processes, including pre-mRNA splicing. Despite their wide occurrence in all eukaryotes, little is known about the roles of Sm-like proteins in the regulation of splicing.
Here, through comprehensive transcriptome analyses, we demonstrate that depletion of the Arabidopsis supersensitive to abscisic acid and drought 1 gene (SAD1), which encodes Sm-like protein 5 (LSm5), promotes an inaccurate selection of splice sites that leads to a genome-wide increase in alternative splicing. In contrast, overexpression of SAD1 strengthens the precision of splice-site recognition and globally inhibits alternative splicing. Further, SAD1 modulates the splicing of stress-responsive genes, particularly under salt-stress conditions. Finally, we find that overexpression of SAD1 in Arabidopsis improves salt tolerance in transgenic plants, which correlates with an increase in splicing accuracy and efficiency for stress-responsive genes.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.77
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 51
Authors
5- PCPeng CuiCorresponding
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
- SZShoudong Zhang
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
- FDFeng Ding
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
- SAShahjahan Ali
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
- LXLiming Xiong
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Arabidopsis
- RNA splicing
- Human genetics
- Computational biology
- Genome
- Genetics
- Alternative splicing