Comparative ribosome profiling reveals distinct translational landscapes of salt-sensitive and -tolerant rice

Author:

Yang Xiaoyu,Song Bo,Cui Jie,Wang Lina,Wang Shuoshuo,Luo Linlin,Gao Lei,Mo Beixin,Yu Yu,Liu LinORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Soil salinization represents a serious threat to global rice production. Although significant research has been conducted to understand salt stress at the genomic, transcriptomic and proteomic levels, few studies have focused on the translatomic responses to this stress. Recent studies have suggested that transcriptional and translational responses to salt stress can often operate independently. Results We sequenced RNA and ribosome-protected fragments (RPFs) from the salt-sensitive rice (O. sativa L.) cultivar ‘Nipponbare’ (NB) and the salt-tolerant cultivar ‘Sea Rice 86’ (SR86) under normal and salt stress conditions. A large discordance between salt-induced transcriptomic and translatomic alterations was found in both cultivars, with more translationally regulated genes being observed in SR86 in comparison to NB. A biased ribosome occupancy, wherein RPF depth gradually increased from the 5′ ends to the 3′ ends of coding regions, was revealed in NB and SR86. This pattern was strengthened by salt stress, particularly in SR86. On the contrary, the strength of ribosome stalling was accelerated in salt-stressed NB but decreased in SR86. Conclusions This study revealed that translational reprogramming represents an important layer of salt stress responses in rice, and the salt-tolerant cultivar SR86 adopts a more flexible translationally adaptive strategy to cope with salt stress compared to the salt susceptible cultivar NB. The differences in translational dynamics between NB and SR86 may derive from their differing levels of ribosome stalling under salt stress.

Funder

the agricultural science and technology innovation program

Guangdong Innovation Research Team Fund

Shenzhen Grant Plan for Science and Technology

Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

national natural science foundation of china

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Genetics,Biotechnology

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