Cell‐type‐specific transcriptomics uncovers spatial regulatory networks in bioenergy sorghum stems

Author:

Fu Jie12ORCID,McKinley Brian34,James Brandon25,Chrisler William6,Markillie Lye Meng6,Gaffrey Matthew J.6,Mitchell Hugh D.6,Riaz Muhammad Rizwan1,Marcial Brenda25,Orr Galya6,Swaminathan Kankshita25,Mullet John34,Marshall‐Colon Amy12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Biology University of Illinois Urbana‐Champaign Urbana Illinois 61801 USA

2. DOE Center for Advanced Bioenergy and Bioproducts Innovation Urbana Illinois 61801 USA

3. Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics Texas A&M University College Station Texas 77843 USA

4. DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Resource Center Madison Wisconsin 53726 USA

5. HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology Huntsville Alabama 35806 USA

6. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Richland Washington 99354 USA

Abstract

SUMMARYBioenergy sorghum is a low‐input, drought‐resilient, deep‐rooting annual crop that has high biomass yield potential enabling the sustainable production of biofuels, biopower, and bioproducts. Bioenergy sorghum's 4–5 m stems account for ~80% of the harvested biomass. Stems accumulate high levels of sucrose that could be used to synthesize bioethanol and useful biopolymers if information about cell‐type gene expression and regulation in stems was available to enable engineering. To obtain this information, laser capture microdissection was used to isolate and collect transcriptome profiles from five major cell types that are present in stems of the sweet sorghum Wray. Transcriptome analysis identified genes with cell‐type‐specific and cell‐preferred expression patterns that reflect the distinct metabolic, transport, and regulatory functions of each cell type. Analysis of cell‐type‐specific gene regulatory networks (GRNs) revealed that unique transcription factor families contribute to distinct regulatory landscapes, where regulation is organized through various modes and identifiable network motifs. Cell‐specific transcriptome data was combined with known secondary cell wall (SCW) networks to identify the GRNs that differentially activate SCW formation in vascular sclerenchyma and epidermal cells. The spatial transcriptomic dataset provides a valuable source of information about the function of different sorghum cell types and GRNs that will enable the engineering of bioenergy sorghum stems, and an interactive web application developed during this project will allow easy access and exploration of the data (https://mc‐lab.shinyapps.io/lcm‐dataset/).

Funder

Biological and Environmental Research

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Publisher

Wiley

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