AI Article Synopsis

  • Plants are sessile organisms that adapt to environmental changes, particularly in response to light, which is crucial for their development and growth.
  • Researchers identified rapidly light-responsive genes known as LRP-DTGs, focusing on how light alters histone acetylation (H3K9ac) to influence transcription in plants.
  • The study suggests that transcriptional changes induced by light are closely linked to chromatin modifications, indicating that different molecular mechanisms may be at work during the initial rapid responses compared to longer-term adaptations.

Article Abstract

As sessile organisms, plants must adapt to a changing environment, sensing variations in resource availability and modifying their development in response. Light is one of the most important resources for plants, and its perception by sensory photoreceptors (e.g., phytochromes) and subsequent transduction into long-term transcriptional reprogramming have been well characterized. Chromatin changes have been shown to be involved in photomorphogenesis. However, the initial short-term transcriptional changes produced by light and what factors enable these rapid changes are not well studied. Here, we define rapidly light-responsive, Phytochrome Interacting Factor (PIF) direct-target genes (LRP-DTGs). We found that a majority of these genes also show rapid changes in Histone 3 Lysine-9 acetylation (H3K9ac) in response to the light signal. Detailed time-course analysis of transcript and chromatin changes showed that, for light-repressed genes, H3K9 deacetylation parallels light-triggered transcriptional repression, while for light-induced genes, H3K9 acetylation appeared to somewhat precede light-activated transcript accumulation. However, direct, real-time imaging of transcript elongation in the nucleus revealed that, in fact, transcriptional induction actually parallels H3K9 acetylation. Collectively, the data raise the possibility that light-induced transcriptional and chromatin-remodeling processes are mechanistically intertwined. Histone modifying proteins involved in long term light responses do not seem to have a role in this fast response, indicating that different factors might act at different stages of the light response. This work not only advances our understanding of plant responses to light, but also unveils a system in which rapid chromatin changes in reaction to an external signal can be studied under natural conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8891703PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.803441DOI Listing

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