Compartmentation of photosynthesis gene expression in C4 maize depends on time of day.
Ana Rita BorbaIvan Reyna-LlorensPatrick J DickinsonGareth SteedPaulo GouveiaAlicja M GórskaCelia GomesJohannes KromdijkAlex A R WebbNelson J M SaiboJulian M HibberdPublished in: Plant physiology (2023)
Compared with the ancestral C3 state, C4 photosynthesis occurs at higher rates with improved water and nitrogen use efficiencies. In both C3 and C4 plants, rates of photosynthesis increase with light intensity and are maximal around midday. We determined that in the absence of light or temperature fluctuations, photosynthesis in maize (Zea mays) peaks in the middle of the subjective photoperiod. To investigate the molecular processes associated with these temporal changes, we performed RNA-sequencing of maize mesophyll and bundle sheath strands over a 24-h time-course. Preferential expression of C4 cycle genes in these cell types was strongest between 6 and 10 h after dawn when rates of photosynthesis were highest. For the bundle sheath, DNA motif enrichment and gene co-expression analyses suggested members of the DNA binding with One Finger (DOF) and MADS (MINICHROMOSOME MAINTENANCE FACTOR 1/AGAMOUS/DEFICIENS/Serum Response Factor)-domain transcription factor families mediate diurnal fluctuations in C4 gene expression, while trans-activation assays in planta confirmed their ability to activate promoter fragments from bundle sheath expressed genes. The work thus identifies transcriptional regulators as well as peaks in cell-specific C4 gene expression coincident with maximum rates of photosynthesis in the maize leaf at midday.
Keyphrases
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- genome wide identification
- dna binding
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- single cell
- poor prognosis
- cell therapy
- single molecule
- high throughput
- stem cells
- high intensity
- long non coding rna
- depressive symptoms
- heart rate
- bone marrow
- cell free
- bioinformatics analysis
- oxidative stress
- body composition
- amino acid