
pmid: 18426585
pmc: PMC2375892
Abstract Background We have further characterized floral organ-localized gene expression in the inflorescence of Arabidopsis thaliana by comparison of massively parallel signature sequencing (MPSS) data. Six libraries of RNA sequence tags from immature inflorescence tissues were constructed and matched to their respective loci in the annotated Arabidopsis genome. These signature libraries survey the floral transcriptome of wild-type tissue as well as the floral homeotic mutants, apetala1, apetala3, agamous, a superman/apetala1 double mutant, and differentiated ovules dissected from the gynoecia of wild-type inflorescences. Comparing and contrasting these MPSS floral expression libraries enabled demarcation of transcripts enriched in the petals, stamens, stigma-style, gynoecia, and those with predicted enrichment within the sepal/sepal-petals, petal-stamens, or gynoecia-stamens. Results By comparison of expression libraries, a total of 572 genes were found to have organ-enriched expression within the inflorescence. The bulk of characterized organ-enriched transcript diversity was noted in the gynoecia and stamens, whereas fewer genes demonstrated sepal or petal-localized expression. Validation of the computational analyses was performed by comparison with previously published expression data, in situ hybridizations, promoter-reporter fusions, and reverse transcription PCR. A number of well-characterized genes were accurately delineated within our system of transcript filtration. Moreover, empirical validations confirm MPSS predictions for several genes with previously uncharacterized expression patterns. Conclusion This extensive MPSS analysis confirms and supplements prior microarray floral expression studies and illustrates the utility of sequence survey-based expression analysis in functional genomics. Spatial floral expression data accrued by MPSS and similar methods will be advantageous in the elucidation of more comprehensive genetic regulatory networks governing floral development.
Transcription, Genetic, Arabidopsis, Gene Expression, Plant Science, Gene, Agricultural and Biological Sciences, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Promoter Regions, Genetic, In Situ Hybridization, Glucuronidase, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, Molecular Mechanisms of Flavonoid Biosynthesis in Plants, Genome, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Agamous, Life Sciences, Functional genomics, Genomics, Immunohistochemistry, Sepal, Organ Specificity, Pollen, MADS-box, Research Article, Petal, Recombinant Fusion Proteins, Flowers, Genes, Plant, Molecular Mechanisms of Plant Development and Regulation, Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, Stamen, Genetics, Molecular Biology, Biology, Gene Library, Gene Expression Profiling, Botany, Mutant, Reproducibility of Results, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Homeotic gene, Molecular Mechanisms of Pollen Development and Function, QK1-989, FOS: Biological sciences, Mutation, Gene expression, Transcriptome
Transcription, Genetic, Arabidopsis, Gene Expression, Plant Science, Gene, Agricultural and Biological Sciences, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Promoter Regions, Genetic, In Situ Hybridization, Glucuronidase, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, Molecular Mechanisms of Flavonoid Biosynthesis in Plants, Genome, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Agamous, Life Sciences, Functional genomics, Genomics, Immunohistochemistry, Sepal, Organ Specificity, Pollen, MADS-box, Research Article, Petal, Recombinant Fusion Proteins, Flowers, Genes, Plant, Molecular Mechanisms of Plant Development and Regulation, Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, Stamen, Genetics, Molecular Biology, Biology, Gene Library, Gene Expression Profiling, Botany, Mutant, Reproducibility of Results, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Homeotic gene, Molecular Mechanisms of Pollen Development and Function, QK1-989, FOS: Biological sciences, Mutation, Gene expression, Transcriptome
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