Abstract

Chinese fir (Cunninghamia lanceolata (Lamb.) Hook.) is one of the most important coniferous evergreen tree species in South China due to its desirable attributes of fast growth and production of strong and hardy wood. However, the yield of Chinese fir is often inhibited by aluminum (Al) toxicity in acidic soils of South China. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of Chinese fir root responses to Al toxicity might help to further increase its productivity. Here we used the Illumina Hiseq4000 platform to carry out transcriptome analysis of Chinese fir roots subjected to Al toxicity conditions. A total of 88.88 Gb of clean data was generated from 12 samples and assembled into 105,732 distinct unigenes. The average length and N50 length of these unigenes were 839 bp and 1411 bp, respectively. Among them, 58362 unigenes were annotated through searches of five public databases (Nr: NCBI non-redundant protein sequences, Swiss-Prot: A manually annotated and reviewed protein sequence database, GO: Gene Ontology, KOG/COG: Clusters of Orthologous Groups of proteins, and KEGG: the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes database), which led to association of unigenes with 44 GO terms. Plus, 1615 transcription factors (TFs) were functionally classified. Then, differentially expressed genes (DEGs, |log2(fold change)| ≥ 1 and FDR ≤ 0.05) were identified in comparisons labelled TC1 (CK-72 h/CK-1 h) and TC2 (Al-72 h/Al-1 h). A large number of TC2 DEGs group were identified, with most being down-regulated under Al stress, while TC1 DEGs were primarily up-regulated. Combining GO, KEGG, and MapMan pathway analysis indicated that many DEGs are involved in primary metabolism, including cell wall metabolism and lipid metabolism, while other DEGs are associated with signaling pathways and secondary metabolism, including flavonoids and phenylpropanoids metabolism. Furthermore, TFs identified in TC1 and TC2 DEGs represented 21 and 40 transcription factor families, respectively. Among them, expression of bHLH, C2H2, ERF, bZIP, GRAS, and MYB TFs changed considerably under Al stress, which suggests that these TFs might play crucial roles in Chinese fir root responses to Al toxicity. These differentially expressed TFs might act in concert with flavonoid and phenylpropanoid pathway genes in fulfilling of key roles in Chinese fir roots responding to Al toxicity.

Highlights

  • Chinese fir (Cunninghamia lanceolata (Lamb.) Hook.) is an important coniferous evergreen tree species that is widely cultivated in South China due to its desirable attributes of fast growth andGenes 2019, 10, 835; doi:10.3390/genes10110835 www.mdpi.com/journal/genesGenes 2019, 10, 835 production of strong and hardy wood

  • To understand potential Al tolerance mechanisms active in Chinese fir roots, 12 root samples from control or Al stress treatments and collected 1 h or 72 h after transferring to treatment media were sequenced on the Illumina HiSeqTM 4000 platform

  • We identified hundreds of Al responsive transcription factors belonging to diverse families, including bHLH, C2H2, ERF, bZIP, and MYB members identified among TC2 Differentially Expressed Gene (DEG), along with other, largely distinct sets of TFs identified among TC1 DEGs

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Summary

Introduction

Chinese fir (Cunninghamia lanceolata (Lamb.) Hook.) is an important coniferous evergreen tree species that is widely cultivated in South China due to its desirable attributes of fast growth andGenes 2019, 10, 835; doi:10.3390/genes10110835 www.mdpi.com/journal/genesGenes 2019, 10, 835 production of strong and hardy wood. Chinese fir (Cunninghamia lanceolata (Lamb.) Hook.) is an important coniferous evergreen tree species that is widely cultivated in South China due to its desirable attributes of fast growth and. Based on planting area data in China’s ninth national forest inventory, Chinese fir is the second most dominant tree species in China, with cultivation occurring on approximately 11 million ha of plantations that account for about 6% of all forested land and 14.2%. This tree species, which has been planted in southeastern Asia for more than 1000 years [1], is primarily distributed in South China [2]. In acid soils Al solubility increases to the point where Al toxicity becomes one of the most important factors limiting plant growth [4,6,7]

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