Abstract

BackgroundAlternative splicing (AS) regulates multiple biological processes including flowering, circadian and stress response in plant. Although accumulating evidences indicate that AS is developmentally regulated, how AS responds to developmental cues is not well understood. Early fruit growth mainly characterized by active cell division and cell expansion contributes to the formation of fruit morphology and quality traits. Transcriptome profiling has revealed the coordinated complex regulation of gene expression in the process. High throughput RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) technology is advancing the genome-wide analysis of AS events in plant species, but the landscape of AS in early growth fruit is still not available for tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), a model plant for fleshy fruit development study.ResultsUsing RNA-seq, we surveyed the AS patterns in tomato seedlings, flowers and young developing fruits and found that 59.3 % of expressed multi-exon genes underwent AS in these tissues. The predominant type of AS events is intron retention, followed by alternative splice donor and acceptor, whereas exon skipping has the lowest frequency. Although the frequencies of AS events are similar among seedlings, flowers and early growth fruits, the fruits generated more splice variants per gene. Further comparison of gene expression in early growth fruits at 2, 5 and 10 days post anthesis revealed that 5206 multi-exon genes had at least one splice variants differentially expressed during early fruit development, whereas only 1059 out of them showed differential expression at gene level. We also identified 27 multi-exon genes showing differential splicing during early fruit growth. In addition, the study discovered 2507 new transcription regions (NTRs) unlinked to the annotated chromosomal regions, from where 956 putative protein coding transcripts and 1690 putative long non-coding RNAs were identified.ConclusionsOur genome-wide analysis of AS events reveals a distinctive AS pattern in early growth tomato fruits. The landscape of AS obtained in this study will facilitate future investigation on transcriptome complexity and AS regulation during early fruit growth in tomato. The newly found NTRs will also be useful for updating the tomato genome annotation.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-015-2128-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Alternative splicing (AS) regulates multiple biological processes including flowering, circadian and stress response in plant

  • Identification of AS events in early fruit development Early fruit growth in tomato is characterized by active cell division and cell expansion [2]

  • RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) was conducted on seedlings of LA1589 and S.lycopersicum cv Heinz1706 as well as anthesis flowers of S.lycopersicum LA2397

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Summary

Introduction

Alternative splicing (AS) regulates multiple biological processes including flowering, circadian and stress response in plant. Fruit growth mainly characterized by active cell division and cell expansion contributes to the formation of fruit morphology and quality traits. Tomato (S.lycopersicum) is a model plant for studying fleshy fruit development. Sun and Xiao BMC Genomics (2015) 16:948 genes regulating the formation of important agricultural traits in tomato have been shown to exert their actions during early fruit growth [4]. Several studies of gene expression profiling using microarray have revealed that during tomato fruit set and early growth more than 1000 genes are differentially expressed [2, 9,10,11,12], indicating that complex transcriptional regulation, especially of genes related to cell division and hormone biosynthesis and perception, is involved in early fruit growth

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