Streamlined spatial and environmental expression signatures characterize the minimalist duckweedWolffia australiana
生物
转录组
计算生物学
基因
基因表达
遗传学
作者
Todd P. Michael,Pin-Jou Wu,Kelly Colt,Bradley W. Abramson,Zhili Pang,Pavel Solanský,Allen Mamerto,Tatsuya Nobori,Joseph R. Ecker,Eric W.‐F. Lam,Todd P. Michael,Marja C.P. Timmermans
出处
期刊:Genome Research [Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory] 日期:2024-07-01卷期号:: gr.279091.124-gr.279091.124
Single-cell genomics permits a new resolution in the examination of molecular and cellular dynamics, allowing global, parallel assessments of cell types and cellular behaviors through development and in response to environmental circumstances, such as interaction with water and the light-dark cycle of the Earth. Here, we leverage the smallest, and possibly most structurally reduced plant, the semi-aquatic Wolffia australiana to understand dynamics of cell expression in these contexts at the whole plant level. We examined single cell resolution RNA sequencing data, and found Wolffia cells divide into four principal clusters representing the above and below water-situated parenchyma and epidermis. While these tissues share transcriptomic similarity with model plants, they display distinct adaptations that Wolffia has made for the aquatic environment. Within this broad classification, discrete subspecializations are evident with select cells showing unique transcriptomic signatures associated with developmental maturation and specialized physiologies. Assessing this simplified biological system temporally at two key time-of-day (TOD) transitions, we identify additional TOD-responsive genes previously overlooked in whole plant transcriptomic approaches and demonstrate that the core circadian clock machinery and its downstream responses can vary in cell-specific manners, even in this simplified system. Distinctions between cell types and their responses to submergence and/or TOD are driven by expression changes of unexpectedly few genes, characterizing Wolffia as a highly streamlined organism with the majority of genes dedicated to fundamental cellular processes. Wolffia provides a unique opportunity to apply reductionist biology to elucidate signaling functions at the organismal level, for which this work provides a powerful resource.