Arginine methylation of SM-LIKE PROTEIN 4 antagonistically affects alternative splicing during Arabidopsis stress responses

Author:

Agrofoglio Yamila Carla1ORCID,Iglesias María José1ORCID,Perez-Santángelo Soledad2ORCID,de Leone María José2ORCID,Koester Tino3ORCID,Catalá Rafael4ORCID,Salinas Julio4ORCID,Yanovsky Marcelo J2ORCID,Staiger Dorothee3ORCID,Mateos Julieta L13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Instituto de Fisiología, Biología Molecular y Neurociencias (IFIBYNE-UBA-CONICET) and Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Ciudad Universitaria , C1428EGA Buenos Aires , Argentina

2. Fundación Instituto Leloir, Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquímicas de Buenos Aires–Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET) , C1405BWE Buenos Aires , Argentina

3. RNA Biology and Molecular Physiology, Faculty of Biology, Bielefeld University , 33615 Bielefeld , Germany

4. Departamento de Biotecnología Microbiana y de Plantas, Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas Margarita Salas, CSIC , 28040 Madrid , Spain

Abstract

Abstract Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) PROTEIN ARGININE METHYLTRANSFERASE5 (PRMT5) post-translationally modifies RNA-binding proteins by arginine (R) methylation. However, the impact of this modification on the regulation of RNA processing is largely unknown. We used the spliceosome component, SM-LIKE PROTEIN 4 (LSM4), as a paradigm to study the role of R-methylation in RNA processing. We found that LSM4 regulates alternative splicing (AS) of a suite of its in vivo targets identified here. The lsm4 and prmt5 mutants show a considerable overlap of genes with altered AS raising the possibility that splicing of those genes could be regulated by PRMT5-dependent LSM4 methylation. Indeed, LSM4 methylation impacts AS, particularly of genes linked with stress response. Wild-type LSM4 and an unmethylable version complement the lsm4-1 mutant, suggesting that methylation is not critical for growth in normal environments. However, LSM4 methylation increases with abscisic acid and is necessary for plants to grow under abiotic stress. Conversely, bacterial infection reduces LSM4 methylation, and plants that express unmethylable-LSM4 are more resistant to Pseudomonas than those expressing wild-type LSM4. This tolerance correlates with decreased intron retention of immune-response genes upon infection. Taken together, this provides direct evidence that R-methylation adjusts LSM4 function on pre-mRNA splicing in an antagonistic manner in response to biotic and abiotic stress.

Funder

Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung

Argentinean National Council of Sciences

Max-Planck Partner Group Program

ANPCyT

Bilateral Grant

CONICET-MINCyT-DFG

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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