Abstract
BackgroundPyropia haitanensis is an economically important marine crop grown in harsh intertidal habitats of southern China; it is also an excellent model system for studying mechanisms of stress tolerance. To understand the molecular mechanisms underlying osmotic tolerance and adaptation to intertidal environments, a comprehensive analysis of genome-wide gene expression profiles in response to dehydration and rehydration in Py. haitanensis was undertaken using digital gene expression profile (DGE) approaches combined with de novo transcriptome sequencing.ResultsRNA-sequencing of the pooled RNA samples from different developmental phases and stress treatments was performed, which generated a total of 47.7 million clean reads. These reads were de novo assembled into 28,536 unigenes (≥200 bp), of which 18,217 unigenes (63.83 %) were annotated in at least one reference database. DGE analysis was performed on four treatments (two biological replicates per treatment), which included moderate dehydration, severe dehydration, rehydration, and normal conditions. The number of raw reads per sample ranged from 12.47 to 15.79 million, with an average of 14.69 million reads per sample. After quality filtering, the number of clean reads per sample ranged from 11.83 to 15.04 million. All distinct sequencing reads were annotated using the transcriptome of Py. haitanensis as reference. A total of 1,681 unigenes showed significant differential expression between moderate dehydration and normal conditions, in which 977 genes were upregulated, and 704 genes were downregulated. Between severe dehydration and normal conditions, 1,993 unigenes showed significantly altered expression, which included both upregulated (1,219) and downregulated genes (774). In addition, 1,086 differentially expressed genes were detected between rehydration and normal conditions, of which 720 genes were upregulated and 366 unigenes were downregulated. Most gene expression patterns in response to dehydration differed from that of rehydration, except for the synthesis of unsaturated fatty acids, several transcription factor families, and molecular chaperones that have been collectively implicated in the processes of dehydration and rehydration in Py. haitanensis.ConclusionsTaken together, these data provide a global high-resolution analysis of gene expression changes during osmotic stress that could potentially serve as a key resource for understanding the biology of osmotic acclimation in intertidal red seaweed.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-015-2226-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
Pyropia haitanensis is an economically important marine crop grown in harsh intertidal habitats of southern China; it is an excellent model system for studying mechanisms of stress tolerance
Unlike that observed during dehydration treatment, many of the unigenes associated with the C4 pathway for photosynthetic carbon reduction were not significantly altered, whereas many unigenes in Py. haitanensis that were involved in a putative C3 pathway for photosynthetic carbon assimilation were upregulated under rehydration, suggesting the return of a typical C3 condition after a subsequent period of one half hour of rehydration
Genes associated with the C4 and C3 pathways, trehalose biosynthesis, porphyrin and chlorophyll metabolism, induction of apoptosis, reproductive structure development, and other carbohydrate metabolic process were determined to be involved in the desiccation response
Summary
Pyropia haitanensis is an economically important marine crop grown in harsh intertidal habitats of southern China; it is an excellent model system for studying mechanisms of stress tolerance. As sessile organisms that inhabit in the intertidal zones of rocky coasts, the thallus of Py. haitanensis is totally submerged in water during high tide, but is exposed to the air during low tide. This crop is constantly exposed to fluctuating and extreme abiotic conditions such as cyclic changes in light levels, abrupt temperature changes, and repeated desiccation/rehydration due to the turning tides. Py. haitanensis is considered an ideal model systerm for investigating the mechanisms of osmotic acclimation in intertidal seaweed
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