info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Light Regulates Plant Alternative Splicing through the Control of Transcriptional Elongation
Fecha
2019-03Registro en:
Godoy Herz, Micaela Amalia; Kubaczka Zoppi, María Guillermina Jazmín; Brzyzek, Grzegorz; Servi, Lucas; Krzyszton, Michal; et al.; Light Regulates Plant Alternative Splicing through the Control of Transcriptional Elongation; Cell Press; Molecular Cell; 73; 5; 3-2019; 1066-1074.e3
1097-2765
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Godoy Herz, Micaela Amalia
Kubaczka Zoppi, María Guillermina Jazmín
Brzyzek, Grzegorz
Servi, Lucas
Krzyszton, Michal
Simpson, Craig
Brown, John
Swiezewski, Szymon
Petrillo, Ezequiel
Kornblihtt, Alberto Rodolfo
Resumen
Light makes carbon fixation possible, allowing plant and animal life on Earth. We have previously shown that light regulates alternative splicing in plants. Light initiates a chloroplast retrograde signaling that regulates nuclear alternative splicing of a subset of Arabidopsis thaliana transcripts. Here, we show that light promotes RNA polymerase II (Pol II) elongation in the affected genes, whereas in darkness, elongation is lower. These changes in transcription are consistent with elongation causing the observed changes in alternative splicing, as revealed by different drug treatments and genetic evidence. The light control of splicing and elongation is abolished in an Arabidopsis mutant defective in the transcription factor IIS (TFIIS). We report that the chloroplast control of nuclear alternative splicing in plants responds to the kinetic coupling mechanism found in mammalian cells, providing unique evidence that coupling is important for a whole organism to respond to environmental cues. Godoy Herz et al. provide biochemical and genetic evidence that plants exposed to light show faster gene transcription than those in the dark. This serves as control for alternative mRNA splicing decisions, which demonstrates that coupling between transcription and splicing is important for a whole organism to respond to environmental cues.