Parasitic plant small RNA analyses unveil parasite-specific signatures of microRNA retention, loss, and gain

Author:

Zangishei Zahra12ORCID,Annacondia Maria Luz3ORCID,Gundlach Heidrun4,Didriksen Alena2,Bruckmüller Julien2ORCID,Salari Hooman1ORCID,Krause Kirsten2ORCID,Martinez German3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Production Engineering and Plant Genetics, Faculty of Science and Agricultural Engineering, Razi University , Kermanshah 67155, Iran

2. Department of Arctic and Marine Biology, Faculty of Biosciences, Fisheries and Economics, UiT The Arctic University of Norway , Tromsø 9019, Norway

3. Department of Plant Biology, Uppsala BioCenter, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences and Linnean Center for Plant Biology , Uppsala 750 07, Sweden

4. Helmholtz Zentrum München (HMGU), Plant Genome and Systems Biology (PGSB) , Neuherberg 85764, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Parasitism is a successful life strategy that has evolved independently in several families of vascular plants. The genera Cuscuta and Orobanche represent examples of the two profoundly different groups of parasites: one parasitizing host shoots and the other infecting host roots. In this study, we sequenced and described the overall repertoire of small RNAs from Cuscuta campestris and Orobanche aegyptiaca. We showed that C. campestris contains a number of novel microRNAs (miRNAs) in addition to a conspicuous retention of miRNAs that are typically lacking in other Solanales, while several typically conserved miRNAs seem to have become obsolete in the parasite. One new miRNA appears to be derived from a horizontal gene transfer event. The exploratory analysis of the miRNA population (exploratory due to the absence of a full genomic sequence for reference) from the root parasitic O. aegyptiaca also revealed a loss of a number of miRNAs compared to photosynthetic species from the same order. In summary, our study shows partly similar evolutionary signatures in the RNA silencing machinery in both parasites. Our data bear proof for the dynamism of this regulatory mechanism in parasitic plants.

Funder

Swedish Research Council and the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation

SLU, the Carl Tryggers Foundation

Swedish Research Council

Formas

Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (KAW

Tromsø Research Foundation

Norwegian Research Foundation (NFR

Krause group. H. Gundlach acknowledges funding from the German Ministry of Education and Research

Ministry of Science, Research and Technology of Iran

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Genetics,Physiology

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