1. An atypical class of non-coding small RNAs is produced in rice leaves upon bacterial infection.
- Author
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Reshetnyak, Ganna, Jacobs, Jonathan M., Auguy, Florence, Sciallano, Coline, Claude, Lisa, Medina, Clemence, Perez-Quintero, Alvaro L., Comte, Aurore, Thomas, Emilie, Bogdanove, Adam, Koebnik, Ralf, Szurek, Boris, Dievart, Anne, Brugidou, Christophe, Lacombe, Severine, and Cunnac, Sebastien
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NON-coding RNA ,PLANT gene silencing ,BACTERIAL diseases ,SMALL interfering RNA ,PLANT-microbe relationships ,COLONIZATION (Ecology) ,MICRORNA - Abstract
Non-coding small RNAs (sRNA) act as mediators of gene silencing and regulate plant growth, development and stress responses. Early insights into plant sRNAs established a role in antiviral defense and they are now extensively studied across plant–microbe interactions. Here, sRNA sequencing discovered a class of sRNA in rice (Oryza sativa) specifically associated with foliar diseases caused by Xanthomonas oryzae bacteria. Xanthomonas-induced small RNAs (xisRNAs) loci were distinctively upregulated in response to diverse virulent strains at an early stage of infection producing a single duplex of 20–22 nt sRNAs. xisRNAs production was dependent on the Type III secretion system, a major bacterial virulence factor for host colonization. xisRNA loci overlap with annotated transcripts sequences, with about half of them encoding protein kinase domain proteins. A number of the corresponding rice cis-genes have documented functions in immune signaling and xisRNA loci predominantly coincide with the coding sequence of a conserved kinase motif. xisRNAs exhibit features of small interfering RNAs and their biosynthesis depend on canonical components OsDCL1 and OsHEN1. xisRNA induction possibly mediates post-transcriptional gene silencing but they do not broadly suppress cis-genes expression on the basis of mRNA-seq data. Overall, our results identify a group of unusual sRNAs with a potential role in plant–microbe interactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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