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An atypical class of non-coding small RNAs produced in rice leaves upon bacterial infection

Authors :
Coline Sciallano
Alvaro L. Perez Quintero
Christophe Brugidou
Boris Szurek
Sébastien Cunnac
Aurore Comte
Emilie Thomas
Lisa Claude
Jonathan M. Jacobs
Séverine Lacombe
Ganna Reshetnyak
Adam J. Bogdanove
Anne Dievart
Clemence Medina
Ralf Koebnik
Florence Auguy
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

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 20-22nt 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 often encoding protein kinase domain proteins. A number of the corresponding rice cis-genes have documented functions in immune signaling and some xisRNA loci 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.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1b089a97b4f6d9153a78f79c105052d1