4.8 Article

N6-Methyladenosine mRNA modification regulates transcripts stability associated with cotton fiber elongation

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 115, Issue 4, Pages 967-985

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.16274

Keywords

fiber elongation; m(6)A methylation; gene expression; Ligon lintless-2; GhMYB44

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study reveals the potential link between m(6)A modification and cotton fiber elongation, and demonstrates that m(6)A methylation regulates the expression of genes related to fiber development by affecting mRNA stability, ultimately affecting cotton fiber elongation.
N-6-Methyladenosine (m(6)A) is the most abundant methylation modification in eukaryotic mRNA. The discovery of the dynamic and reversible regulatory mechanism of m(6)A has greatly promoted the development of m(6)A-led epitranscriptomics. However, the characterization of m(6)A in cotton fiber is still unknown. Here, we reveal the potential link between m(6)A modification and cotton fiber elongation by parallel m(6)A-immunoprecipitation-sequencing (m(6)A-seq) and RNA-seq analysis of fibers from the short fiber mutants Ligonliness-2 (Li-2) and wildtype (WT). This study demonstrated a higher level of m(6)A in the Li-2 mutant, with the enrichment of m(6)A modifications in the stop codon, 3'-untranslated region and coding sequence regions than in WT cotton. In the correlation analysis between genes containing differential m(6)A modifications and differentially expressed genes, we identified several genes that could potentially regulate fiber elongation, including cytoskeleton, microtubule binding, cell wall and transcription factors (TFs). We further confirmed that the methylation of m(6)A affected the mRNA stability of these fiber elongation-related genes including the TF GhMYB44, which showed the highest expression level in the RNA-seq data and m(6)A methylation in the m(6)A-seq data. Next, the overexpression of GhMYB44 reduces fiber elongation, whereas the silencing of GhMYB44 produces longer fibers. In summary, these results uncover that m(6)A methylation regulated the expression of genes related to fiber development by affecting mRNA's stability, ultimately affecting cotton fiber elongation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available