Photoperiod-responsive changes in chromatin accessibility in phloem companion and epidermis cells of Arabidopsis leaves

Author:

Tian Hao1ORCID,Li Yuru1ORCID,Wang Ce1,Xu Xingwen1ORCID,Zhang Yajie1,Zeb Qudsia1,Zicola Johan2ORCID,Fu Yongfu3ORCID,Turck Franziska2ORCID,Li Legong1ORCID,Lu Zefu3ORCID,Liu Liangyu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Beijing Key Laboratory of Plant Gene Resources and Biotechnology for Carbon Reduction and Environmental Improvement, and College of Life Sciences, Capital Normal University, Beijing 100048, China

2. Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research, Cologne, D-50829, Germany

3. National Key Facility of Crop Gene Resource and Genetic Improvement, Institute of Crop Sciences, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing 100081, China

Abstract

Abstract Photoperiod plays a key role in controlling the phase transition from vegetative to reproductive growth in flowering plants. Leaves are the major organs perceiving day-length signals, but how specific leaf cell types respond to photoperiod remains unknown. We integrated photoperiod-responsive chromatin accessibility and transcriptome data in leaf epidermis and vascular companion cells of Arabidopsis thaliana by combining isolation of nuclei tagged in specific cell/tissue types with assay for transposase-accessible chromatin using sequencing and RNA-sequencing. Despite a large overlap, vasculature and epidermis cells responded differently. Long-day predominantly induced accessible chromatin regions (ACRs); in the vasculature, more ACRs were induced and these were located at more distal gene regions, compared with the epidermis. Vascular ACRs induced by long days were highly enriched in binding sites for flowering-related transcription factors. Among the highly ranked genes (based on chromatin and expression signatures in the vasculature), we identified TREHALOSE-PHOSPHATASE/SYNTHASE 9 (TPS9) as a flowering activator, as shown by the late flowering phenotypes of T-DNA insertion mutants and transgenic lines with phloem-specific knockdown of TPS9. Our cell-type-specific analysis sheds light on how the long-day photoperiod stimulus impacts chromatin accessibility in a tissue-specific manner to regulate plant development.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Beijing excellent young scientist program

Youth Innovative Research Team of Capital Normal University

Capacity Building for Sci-Tech Innovation-Fundamental Scientific Research Funds

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science

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