REVEILLE2 thermosensitive splicing: a molecular basis for the integration of nocturnal temperature information by the Arabidopsis circadian clock

Author:

James Allan B.1ORCID,Sharples Chantal12ORCID,Laird Janet1ORCID,Armstrong Emily May1ORCID,Guo Wenbin3ORCID,Tzioutziou Nikoleta45ORCID,Zhang Runxuan3ORCID,Brown John W. S.45ORCID,Nimmo Hugh G.1ORCID,Jones Matthew A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Molecular Biosciences University of Glasgow Glasgow G12 8QQ UK

2. RNA Biology and Molecular Physiology, Faculty for Biology Bielefeld University Universitaetsstrasse 25 33615 Bielefeld Germany

3. Information and Computational Sciences The James Hutton Institute Invergowrie Dundee DD2 5DA UK

4. Plant Sciences Division, College of Life Sciences University of Dundee Invergowrie Dundee DD2 5DA UK

5. Cell and Molecular Sciences The James Hutton Institute Invergowrie Dundee DD2 5DA UK

Abstract

Summary Cold stress is one of the major environmental factors that limit growth and yield of plants. However, it is still not fully understood how plants account for daily temperature fluctuations, nor how these temperature changes are integrated with other regulatory systems such as the circadian clock. We demonstrate that REVEILLE2 undergoes alternative splicing after chilling that increases accumulation of a transcript isoform encoding a MYB‐like transcription factor. We explore the biological function of REVEILLE2 in Arabidopsis thaliana using a combination of molecular genetics, transcriptomics, and physiology. Disruption of REVEILLE2 alternative splicing alters regulatory gene expression, impairs circadian timing, and improves photosynthetic capacity. Changes in nuclear gene expression are particularly apparent in the initial hours following chilling, with chloroplast gene expression subsequently upregulated. The response of REVEILLE2 to chilling extends our understanding of plants immediate response to cooling. We propose that the circadian component REVEILLE2 restricts plants responses to nocturnal reductions in temperature, thereby enabling appropriate responses to daily environmental changes.

Funder

UK Research and Innovation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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