Abstract

Xylem development is a key process for wood formation in woody plants. To study the molecular regulatory mechanisms related to xylem development in hybrid poplar P. davidiana × P. bolleana, transcriptome analyses were conducted on developing xylem at six different growth stages within a single growing season. Xylem development and differentially expressed genes in the six time points were selected for a regulatory analysis. Xylem development was observed in stem sections at different growth stages, which showed that xylem development extended from the middle of April to early August and included cell expansion and secondary cell wall biosynthesis. An RNA-seq analysis of six samples with three replicates was performed. After transcriptome assembly and annotation, the differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified, and a Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis, Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathway analysis and expression analysis of the DEGs were performed on each sample. On average, we obtained >20 million clean reads per sample, which were assembled into 84,733 nonredundant transcripts, of which there were 17,603 unigenes with lengths >1 kb. There were 14,890 genes that were differentially expressed among the six stages. The upregulated DEGs were enriched in GO terms related to cell wall biosynthesis between S1 vs. S2 or S3 vs. S4 and, in GO terms, related to phytohormones in the S1 vs. S2 or S4 vs. S5 comparisons. The downregulated DEGs were enriched in GO terms related to cell wall biosynthesis between S4 vs. S5 or S5 vs. S6 and, in GO terms, related to hormones between S1 vs. S2 or S2 vs. S3. The KEGG pathways in the DEGs related to “phenylpropanoid biosynthesis”, “plant hormone signal transduction” and “starch and sucrose metabolism” were significantly enriched among the different stages. The DEGs related to cell expansion, polysaccharide metabolism and synthesis, lignin synthesis, transcription factors and hormones were identified. The identification of genes involved in the regulation of xylem development will increase our understanding of the molecular regulation of wood formation in trees and, also, offers potential targets for genetic manipulation to improve the properties of wood.

Highlights

  • IntroductionDue to the short growth period, rapid growth, strong adaptability and strong shading ability, species of Populus are widely planted all over the world

  • The analysis showed that the “phenylpropanoid biosynthesis” pathway was significantly enriched in the differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in the S1 vs. S2, S1 vs. S5 and S1 vs. S6 comparisons; “plant hormone signal transduction” was enriched in the DEGs in the S1 vs. S2 and S1 vs. S3 comparisons; “starch and sucrose metabolism” was enriched in DEGs in all comparisons and “amino sugar and nucleotide sugar metabolism” was enriched in the DEGs in the

  • Section we identified six sucrose synthase-related these genes may be involved in the regulation of cell expansion and cell genes, four of which were significantly upregulated in S2 and S3, and their expression wall synthesis in the early stages of xylem development

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Summary

Introduction

Due to the short growth period, rapid growth, strong adaptability and strong shading ability, species of Populus are widely planted all over the world. P. davidiana × P. bolleana is an interspecific hybrid of two species in Populus sect Populus. “Shanxin” poplar has the characteristics of rapid growth, a straight and full trunk, white and delicate material, smooth green bark, graceful posture, a narrow crown and resistance to cold and drought. It is an excellent fast-growing poplar species for afforestation and urban and rural greening in arid and cold regions in the Northern hemisphere [2]. Since “Shanxin” poplar cuttings do not root the survival rate is low

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