4.8 Article

Differential alternative polyadenylation of homoeologous genes of allohexaploid wheat ABD subgenomes during drought stress response

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 114, Issue 3, Pages 499-518

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.16150

Keywords

alternative polyadenylation; homoeologous genes; allohexaploid; wheat; Triticum aestivum; drought stress

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The expression of homoeologous genes in allohexaploid wheat genome remains largely unknown at the co-transcriptional level. This study focused on alternative polyadenylation (APA) and found that drought stress led to extensive APA in wheat, involving a large number of stress-responsive genes. The study also revealed different poly(A) sites, APA patterns, and 3' UTR length changes among homoeologous genes. These findings shed light on the role of APA in drought stress response and provide new insights into the adaptability of homoeologous genes through transcriptome diversity.
Because allohexaploid wheat genome contains ABD subgenomes, how the expression of homoeologous genes is coordinated remains largely unknown, particularly at the co-transcriptional level. Alternative polyadenylation (APA) is an important part of co-transcriptional regulation, which is crucial in developmental processes and stress responses. Drought stress is a major threat to the stable yield of wheat. Focusing on APA, we used poly(A) tag sequencing to track poly(A) site dynamics in wheat under drought stress. The results showed that drought stress led to extensive APA involving 37-47% of differentially expressed genes in wheat. Significant poly(A) site switching was found in stress-responsive genes. Interestingly, homoeologous genes exhibit unequal numbers of poly(A) sites, divergent APA patterns with tissue specificity and time-course dynamics, and distinct 3 & PRIME;-UTR length changes. Moreover, differentially expressed transcripts in leaves and roots used different poly(A) signals, the up- and downregulated isoforms had distinct preferences for non-canonical poly(A) sites. Genes that encode key polyadenylation factors showed differential expression patterns under drought stress. In summary, poly(A) signals and the changes in core poly(A) factors may widely affect the selection of poly(A) sites and gene expression levels during the response to drought stress, and divergent APA patterns among homoeologous genes add extensive plasticity to this responsive network. These results not only reveal the significant role of APA in drought stress response, but also provide a fresh perspective on how homoeologous genes contribute to adaptability through transcriptome diversity. In addition, this work provides information about the ends of transcripts for a better annotation of the wheat genome.

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