Abstract

BackgroundAlternative splicing (AS) is an important mechanism of posttranscriptional modification and dynamically regulates multiple physiological processes in plants, including fruit ripening. However, little is known about alternative splicing during fruit development in fleshy fruits.ResultsWe studied the alternative splicing at the immature and ripe stages during fruit development in cucumber, melon, papaya and peach. We found that 14.96–17.48% of multiexon genes exhibited alternative splicing. Intron retention was not always the most frequent event, indicating that the alternative splicing pattern during different developmental process differs. Alternative splicing was significantly more prevalent at the ripe stage than at the immature stage in cucumber and melon, while the opposite trend was shown in papaya and peach, implying that developmental stages adopt different alternative splicing strategies for their specific functions. Some genes involved in fruit ripening underwent stage-specific alternative splicing, indicating that alternative splicing regulates fruits ripening. Conserved alternative splicing events did not appear to be stage-specific. Clustering fruit developmental stages across the four species based on alternative splicing profiles resulted in species-specific clustering, suggesting that diversification of alternative splicing contributes to lineage-specific evolution in fleshy fruits.ConclusionsWe obtained high quality transcriptomes and alternative splicing events during fruit development across the four species. Dynamics and nonconserved alternative splicing were discovered. The candidate stage-specific AS genes involved in fruit ripening will provide valuable insight into the roles of alternative splicing during the developmental processes of fleshy fruits.

Highlights

  • Alternative splicing (AS) is an important mechanism of posttranscriptional modification and dynamically regulates multiple physiological processes in plants, including fruit ripening

  • The data were downloaded from the NCBI Sequence Read Archive (SRA) database (Accession: PRJNA381300)

  • 4 ~ 12 million raw reads were obtained per sample, and Trimmomatic [28] was applied to trim the adapter sequences and filter out the low-quality reads

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Summary

Introduction

Alternative splicing (AS) is an important mechanism of posttranscriptional modification and dynamically regulates multiple physiological processes in plants, including fruit ripening. Little is known about alternative splicing during fruit development in fleshy fruits. Alternative splicing (AS) is an important cotranscriptional modification that greatly expands the diversity of the transcriptome and proteome in eukaryotes [1,2,3]. AS has been proven to play important roles in a variety of plant processes, including fruit ripening [11,12,13,14,15]. In rice (Oryza sativa), OsPPR939 plays crucial roles in plant growth and pollen development by splicing introns 1, 2, and 3 of mitochondrial nad5 [17]. Fruits can be divided into fleshy fruits and dry fruits according to the

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