Abstract

In the last two decades switchgrass has received increasing attention as a promising bioenergy feedstock. Biomass is the principal trait for improvement in switchgrass breeding programs and tillering is an important component of biomass yield. Switchgrass inbred lines derived from a single parent showing vast variation in tiller number trait was used in this study. Axillary buds, which can develop into tillers, and node tissues, which give rise to axillary buds, were collected from high and low tillering inbred lines growing in field conditions. RNA from buds and nodes from the contrasting inbred lines were used for transcriptome profiling with switchgrass Affymetrix genechips. Nearly 7% of the probesets on the genechip exhibited significant differential expression in these lines. Real-time PCR analysis of 30 genes confirmed the differential expression patterns observed with genechips. Cluster analysis aided in identifying probesets unique to high or low tillering lines as well as those specific to buds or nodes of high tillering lines. Rice orthologs of the switchgrass genes were used for gene ontology (GO) analysis with AgriGO. Enrichment of genes associated with amino acid biosynthesis, lipid transport and vesicular transport were observed in low tillering lines. Enrichment of GOs for translation, RNA binding and gene expression in high tillering lines were indicative of active metabolism associated with rapid growth and development. Identification of different classes of transcription factor genes suggests that regulation of many genes determines the complex process of axillary bud initiation and development. Genes identified in this study will complement the current ongoing efforts in quantitative trait loci mapping of tillering in switchgrass.

Highlights

  • Switchgrass is a C4 perennial grass that was selected in 1991 by the department of energy as a model herbaceous bioenergy crop for the development of renewable feed stock resource to produce transportation fuel [1]

  • In this study we examined transcriptomic differences in axillary buds and nodes in switchgrass lines derived from an inbred population that show extreme variation for tiller number trait

  • Several field studies have indicated that tiller number trait is positively correlated with the biomass yield in switchgrass plants [9,11,34]

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Summary

Introduction

In this study we examined transcriptomic differences in axillary buds and nodes in switchgrass lines derived from an inbred population that show extreme variation for tiller number trait. Using the normalized signal intensities, fold-change ratios between the high and low tillering lines were computed for the buds and node tissues. Clustering and Gene Ontology Enrichment Analysis We tested the null hypothesis that gene expression patterns are unique for each genotype (low and high tillering line) and for each tissue sample used in this study (nodes and buds).

Results
Conclusion

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