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Global Profiling of Rice and Poplar Transcriptomes Highlights Key Conserved Circadian-Controlled Pathways and cis-Regulatory Modules

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Title Global Profiling of Rice and Poplar Transcriptomes Highlights Key Conserved Circadian-Controlled Pathways and cis-Regulatory Modules
Names Filichkin, Sergei A. (creator)
Breton, Ghislain (creator)
Priest, Henry D. (creator)
Dharmawardhana, Palitha (creator)
Jaiswal, Pankaj (creator)
Fox, Samuel E. (creator)
Michael, Todd P. (creator)
Chory, Joanne (creator)
Kay, Steve A. (creator)
Mockler, Todd C. (creator)
Date Issued 2011-06-09 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by the Public Library of Science. The published article can be found at: http://www.plosone.org/.
Abstract BACKGROUND: Circadian clocks provide an adaptive advantage through anticipation of daily and seasonal environmental
changes. In plants, the central clock oscillator is regulated by several interlocking feedback loops. It was shown that a
substantial proportion of the Arabidopsis genome cycles with phases of peak expression covering the entire day.
Synchronized transcriptome cycling is driven through an extensive network of diurnal and clock-regulated transcription
factors and their target cis-regulatory elements. Study of the cycling transcriptome in other plant species could thus help
elucidate the similarities and differences and identify hubs of regulation common to monocot and dicot plants.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using a combination of oligonucleotide microarrays and data mining pipelines, we
examined daily rhythms in gene expression in one monocotyledonous and one dicotyledonous plant, rice and poplar,
respectively. Cycling transcriptomes were interrogated under different diurnal (driven) and circadian (free running) light and
temperature conditions. Collectively, photocycles and thermocycles regulated about 60% of the expressed nuclear genes in
rice and poplar. Depending on the condition tested, up to one third of oscillating Arabidopsis-poplar-rice orthologs were
phased within three hours of each other suggesting a high degree of conservation in terms of rhythmic gene expression.
We identified clusters of rhythmically co-expressed genes and searched their promoter sequences to identify phase-specific
cis-elements, including elements that were conserved in the promoters of Arabidopsis, poplar, and rice.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results show that the cycling patterns of many circadian clock genes are highly conserved
across poplar, rice, and Arabidopsis. The expression of many orthologous genes in key metabolic and regulatory pathways is
diurnal and/or circadian regulated and phased to similar times of day. Our results confirm previous findings in Arabidopsis
of three major classes of cis-regulatory modules within the plant circadian network: the morning (ME, GBOX), evening (EE,
GATA), and midnight (PBX/TBX/SBX) modules. Identification of identical overrepresented motifs in the promoters of cycling
genes from different species suggests that the core diurnal/circadian cis-regulatory network is deeply conserved between
mono- and dicotyledonous species.
Genre Article
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
Identifier Filichkin SA, Breton G, Priest HD, Dharmawardhana P, Jaiswal P, et al. (2011) Global Profiling of Rice and Poplar Transcriptomes Highlights Key Conserved Circadian-Controlled Pathways and cis-Regulatory Modules. PLoS ONE 6(6): e16907. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0016907

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