4.7 Article

The spliceophilin CYP18-2 is mainly involved in the splicing of retained introns under heat stress in Arabidopsis

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 65, Issue 5, Pages 1113-1133

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jipb.13450

Keywords

alternative splicing; CYP18-2; HSFA2-III; intron retention; spliceophilin; spliceosome complex B-ACT; thermotolerance

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Peptidyl-prolyl isomerase-like 1 (PPIL1), represented by Arabidopsis thaliana CYCLOPHILIN 18-2 (AtCYP18-2), plays a crucial role in heat tolerance by regulating pre-mRNA splicing. AtCYP18-2 interacts with spliceosome complex B-ACT components, particularly with small nuclear RNAs U5 and U6, in response to heat stress. Loss-of-function mutation of AtCYP18-2 affects alternative splicing of heat stress-responsive genes, leading to decreased levels of intron-containing transcripts and impairment of thermotolerance.
Peptidyl-prolyl isomerase-like 1 (PPIL1) is associated with the human spliceosome complex. However, its function in pre-mRNA splicing remains unclear. In this study, we show that Arabidopsis thaliana CYCLOPHILIN 18-2 (AtCYP18-2), a PPIL1 homolog, plays an essential role in heat tolerance by regulating pre-mRNA splicing. Under heat stress conditions, AtCYP18-2 expression was upregulated in mature plants and GFP-tagged AtCYP18-2 redistributed to nuclear and cytoplasmic puncta. We determined that AtCYP18-2 interacts with several spliceosome complex B-ACT components in nuclear puncta and is primarily associated with the small nuclear RNAs U5 and U6 in response to heat stress. The AtCYP18-2 loss-of-function allele cyp18-2 engineered by CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene editing exhibited a hypersensitive phenotype to heat stress relative to the wild type. Moreover, global transcriptome profiling showed that the cyp18-2 mutation affects alternative splicing of heat stress-responsive genes under heat stress conditions, particularly intron retention (IR). The abundance of most intron-containing transcripts of a subset of genes essential for thermotolerance decreased in cyp18-2 compared to the wild type. Furthermore, the intron-containing transcripts of two heat stress-related genes, HEAT SHOCK PROTEIN 101 (HSP101) and HEAT SHOCK FACTOR A2 (HSFA2), produced functional proteins. HSP101-IR-GFP localization was responsive to heat stress, and HSFA2-III-IR interacted with HSF1 and HSP90.1 in plant cells. Our findings reveal that CYP18-2 functions as a splicing factor within the B-ACT spliceosome complex and is crucial for ensuring the production of adequate levels of alternatively spliced transcripts to enhance thermotolerance.

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