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Non-coding RNA may be associated with cytoplasmic male sterility in Silene vulgaris

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    0476510 - ÚEB 2018 RIV GB eng J - Journal Article
    Stone, James D. - Koloušková, Pavla - Sloan, D.B. - Štorchová, Helena
    Non-coding RNA may be associated with cytoplasmic male sterility in Silene vulgaris.
    Journal of Experimental Botany. Roč. 68, č. 7 (2017), s. 1599-1612. ISSN 0022-0957. E-ISSN 1460-2431
    R&D Projects: GA ČR(CZ) GA16-09220S
    Institutional support: RVO:61389030
    Keywords : Cytoplasmic male sterility * Editing * Mitochondrion * Non-coding RNA * Silene vulgaris * Splicing * Transcriptome
    OECD category: Plant sciences, botany
    Impact factor: 5.354, year: 2017

    Cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) is a widespread phenomenon in flowering plants caused by mitochondrial (mt) genes. CMS genes typically encode novel proteins that interfere with mt functions and can be silenced by nuclear fertility-restorer genes. Although the molecular basis of CMS is well established in a number of crop systems, our understanding of it in natural populations is far more limited. To identify CMS genes in a gynodioecious plant, Silene vulgaris, we constructed mt transcriptomes and compared transcript levels and RNA editing patterns in floral bud tissue from female and hermaphrodite full siblings. The transcriptomes from female and hermaphrodite individuals were very similar overall with respect to variation in levels of transcript abundance across the genome, the extent of RNA editing, and the order in which RNA editing and intron splicing events occurred. We found only a single genomic region that was highly overexpressed and differentially edited in females relative to hermaphrodites. This region is not located near any other transcribed elements and lacks an open-reading frame (ORF) of even moderate size. To our knowledge, this transcript would represent the first non-coding mt RNA associated with CMS in plants and is, therefore, an important target for future functional validation studies.
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0272991

     
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