Impact of translational regulation on diel expression revealed by time‐series ribosome profiling in Arabidopsis

Author:

Aoyama Haruka1ORCID,Arae Toshihiro2ORCID,Yamashita Yui3ORCID,Toyoda Atsushi4ORCID,Naito Satoshi3ORCID,Sotta Naoyuki5ORCID,Chiba Yukako16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Life Science Hokkaido University Sapporo 060‐0810 Japan

2. Graduate School of Frontier Sciences The University of Tokyo Kashiwa 277‐8562 Japan

3. Graduate School of Agriculture Hokkaido University Sapporo 060‐8589 Japan

4. Advanced Genomics Center, National Institute of Genetics Mishima 411‐8540 Japan

5. Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences The University of Tokyo Tokyo 113‐8657 Japan

6. Faculty of Science Hokkaido University Sapporo 060‐0810 Japan

Abstract

SUMMARYPlants have developed the ability to adjust to the day/night cycle through the expression of diel genes, which allow them to effectively respond to environmental changes and optimise their growth and development. Diel oscillations also have substantial implications in many physiological processes, including photosynthesis, floral development, and environmental stress responses. The expression of diel genes is regulated by a combination of the circadian clock and responses to environmental cues, such as light and temperature. A great deal of information is available on the transcriptional regulation of diel gene expression. However, the extent to which translational regulation is involved in controlling diel changes in expression is not yet clear. To investigate the impact of translational regulation on diel expression, we conducted Ribo‐seq and RNA‐seq analyses on a time‐series sample of Arabidopsis shoots cultivated under a 12 h light/dark cycle. Our results showed that translational regulation is involved in about 71% of the genes exhibiting diel changes in mRNA abundance or translational activity, including clock genes, many of which are subject to both translational and transcriptional control. They also revealed that the diel expression of glycosylation and ion‐transporter‐related genes is mainly established through translational regulation. The expression of several diel genes likely subject to translational regulation through upstream open‐reading frames was also determined.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Ohsumi Frontier Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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