Abstract

Prairie cordgrass (Spartina pectinata), a perennial C4 grass native to the North American prairie, has several distinctive characteristics that potentially make it a model crop for production in stressful environments. However, little is known about the transcriptome dynamics of prairie cordgrass despite its unique freezing stress tolerance. Therefore, the purpose of this work was to explore the transcriptome dynamics of prairie cordgrass in response to freezing stress at -5°C for 5 min and 30 min. We used a RNA-sequencing method to assemble the S. pectinata leaf transcriptome and performed gene-expression profiling of the transcripts under freezing treatment. Six differentially expressed gene (DEG) groups were categorized from the profiling. In addition, two major consecutive orders of gene expression were observed in response to freezing; the first being the acute up-regulation of genes involved in plasma membrane modification, calcium-mediated signaling, proteasome-related proteins, and transcription regulators (e.g., MYB and WRKY). The follow-up and second response was of genes involved in encoding the putative anti-freezing protein and the previously known DNA and cell-damage-repair proteins. Moreover, we identified the genes involved in epigenetic regulation and circadian-clock expression. Our results indicate that freezing response in S. pectinata reflects dynamic changes in rapid-time duration, as well as in metabolic, transcriptional, post-translational, and epigenetic regulation.

Highlights

  • Prairie cordgrass (Spartina pectinata Link) is a perennial, rhizomatous, C4 grass native to the North American prairie [1,2]

  • Because we were unable to determine that down-regulation or negatively regulated signaling had a damaging effect, we mainly focused on upregulated gene expression patterns

  • In Arabidopsis thaliana and Vigna radiate, most PLC paralogs were highly up-regulated in response to several different abiotic stresses, such as cold, drought, and salt [49,53]

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Summary

Introduction

Prairie cordgrass (Spartina pectinata Link) is a perennial, rhizomatous, C4 grass native to the North American prairie [1,2]. It commonly grows in wet tallgrass prairies, is salt tolerant, and is successfully used in riparian plantings and stream-bank stabilization [3,4]. It is being considered as a dedicated energy crop for marginal lands due to its abiotic environmental stress tolerances and high biomass yield potential [5,6,7,8,9,10].

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