Abstract

Alternatively spliced genes produce multiple spliced isoforms, called transcript variants. In differential alternative splicing, transcript variant abundance differs across sample types. Differential alternative splicing is common in animal systems and influences cellular development in many processes, but its extent and significance is not as well known in plants. To investigate differential alternative splicing in plants, we examined RNA‐Seq data from rice seedlings. The data included three biological replicates per sample type, approximately 30 million sequence alignments per replicate, and four sample types: roots and shoots treated with exogenous cytokinin delivered hydroponically or a mock treatment. Cytokinin treatment triggered expression changes in thousands of genes but had negligible effect on splicing patterns. However, many genes were differentially spliced between mock‐treated roots and shoots, indicating that our methods were sufficiently sensitive to detect differential splicing between data sets. Quantitative fragment analysis of reverse transcriptase‐PCR products made from newly prepared rice samples confirmed 9 of 10 differential splicing events between rice roots and shoots. Differential alternative splicing typically changed the relative abundance of splice variants that co‐occurred in a data set. Analysis of a similar (but less deeply sequenced) RNA‐Seq data set from Arabidopsis showed the same pattern. In both the Arabidopsis and rice RNA‐Seq data sets, most genes annotated as alternatively spliced had small minor variant frequencies. Of splicing choices with abundant support for minor forms, most alternative splicing events were located within the protein‐coding sequence and maintained the annotated reading frame. A tool for visualizing protein annotations in the context of genomic sequence (ProtAnnot) together with a genome browser (Integrated Genome Browser) were used to visualize and assess effects of differential splicing on gene function. In general, differentially spliced regions coincided with conserved protein domains, indicating that differential alternative splicing is likely to affect protein function between root and shoot tissue in rice.

Highlights

  • Alternative splicing of pre-­mRNA transcripts enables one gene to produce multiple transcript variants encoding different functions

  • Nearly every differential splicing event detected changed the relative abundance of splice variants that co-­occurred in the same sample. These results suggest differential alternative splicing likely contributes to gene function diversification between roots and shoots by moderating the relative abundance of co-­expressed splice variants, but plays little role in cytokinin signaling

  • This study profiled alternative splicing using a high coverage RNA-­Seq data from 10-­day old, hydroponically grown rice seedlings treated with a cytokinin hormone

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Alternative splicing of pre-­mRNA transcripts enables one gene to produce multiple transcript variants encoding different functions. A more comprehensive analysis of multiple Arabidopsis data sets found a high incidence of isoform switching, in which the identity of the most prevalent variant differs between sample types (Vaneechoutte, Estrada, Lin, Loraine, & Vandepoele, 2017) This splicing diversity may have arisen in part from the heterogeneity of the data sets used, which were produced using rapidly changing (and improving) sequencing technologies at different times by different groups. A parallel study produced an analogous data set from Arabidopsis for comparison, but was less deeply sequenced (Zubo et al, 2017) Both the rice and Arabidopsis RNA-­Seq data sets included three biological replicates per sample type and four sample types—roots and shoots treated with exogenous cytokinin or a mock, vehicle-­only treatment. These results suggest differential alternative splicing likely contributes to gene function diversification between roots and shoots by moderating the relative abundance of co-­expressed splice variants, but plays little role in cytokinin signaling

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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