Open Access
Comparative transcriptomics enables the identification of functional orthologous genes involved in early leaf growth
Author(s) -
Vercruysse Jasmien,
Van Bel Michiel,
OsunaCruz Cristina M.,
Kulkarni Shubhada R.,
Storme Véronique,
Nelissen Hilde,
Gonzalez Nathalie,
Inzé Dirk,
Vandepoele Klaas
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plant biotechnology journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.525
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1467-7652
pISSN - 1467-7644
DOI - 10.1111/pbi.13223
Subject(s) - biology , arabidopsis , gene , transcriptome , genetics , transcription factor , genome , phenotype , conserved sequence , arabidopsis thaliana , orthologous gene , gene expression , mutant , peptide sequence
Summary Leaf growth is a complex trait for which many similarities exist in different plant species, suggesting functional conservation of the underlying pathways. However, a global view of orthologous genes involved in leaf growth showing conserved expression in dicots and monocots is currently missing. Here, we present a genome‐wide comparative transcriptome analysis between Arabidopsis and maize, identifying conserved biological processes and gene functions active during leaf growth. Despite the orthology complexity between these distantly related plants, 926 orthologous gene groups including 2829 Arabidopsis and 2974 maize genes with similar expression during leaf growth were found, indicating conservation of the underlying molecular networks. We found 65% of these genes to be involved in one‐to‐one orthology, whereas only 28.7% of the groups with divergent expression had one‐to‐one orthology. Within the pool of genes with conserved expression, 19 transcription factor families were identified, demonstrating expression conservation of regulators active during leaf growth. Additionally, 25 Arabidopsis and 25 maize putative targets of the TCP transcription factors with conserved expression were determined based on the presence of enriched transcription factor binding sites. Based on large‐scale phenotypic data, we observed that genes with conserved expression have a higher probability to be involved in leaf growth and that leaf‐related phenotypes are more frequently present for genes having orthologues between dicots and monocots than clade‐specific genes. This study shows the power of integrating transcriptomic with orthology data to identify or select candidates for functional studies during leaf development in flowering plants.