Abstract
Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is an important RNA quality control pathway. It aids in degrading harmful erroneous mRNA, thereby preserving a stable and healthy internal environment. In this study, we employed CRISPR/Cas9 and amiRNA technology to generate knock out or knock down mutants of realted genes in the rice NMD pathway. Through transcriptome sequencing and observing phenotype changes, the study explored the impact of NMD pathway defects on rice gene expression and alternative splicing. The results suggest that even partial defects will induce phenotypic changes such as plant height and pollen vitality to different degrees, showing necessity of NMD factors. Gene expression analysis reveals that most differentially expressed genes are upregulated in the mutants, with ko-upf1-like and kd-upf1 defects having a more significant impact than kd-upf2 and kd-upf3. Specifically, NMD pathway defects result in increased expression levels of rice defense response-related genes and decreased expression levels of secondary metabolism-related genes, with a wider range of affected genes observed in 60-day-old senescence mutants. Transcript analysis indicates that different NMD related genes defects alter hundreds of alternative splicing events, mostly enriched in genes involving alternative splicing regulatory pathways. Approximately half of these events are shared among different mutants, and a substantial number of affected transcripts show NMD target features. NMD could affect both the transcript abundance and their splicing subtypes to regulate the defense response and early-senescence associated pathways, which plays a vital role in rice growth and reproduction.
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