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Regulatory actors and alternative routes for Arabidopsis seed germination are revealed using a pathway‐based analysis of transcriptomic datasets
Author(s) -
Ponnaiah Maharajah,
Gilard Françoise,
Gakière Bertrand,
ElMaaroufBouteau Hayat,
Bailly Christophe
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the plant journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.058
H-Index - 269
eISSN - 1365-313X
pISSN - 0960-7412
DOI - 10.1111/tpj.14311
Subject(s) - germination , transcriptome , biology , imbibition , seed dormancy , dormancy , arabidopsis , identification (biology) , computational biology , gene , gene expression , botany , genetics , mutant
Summary Regulation of seed germination by dormancy relies on a complex network of transcriptional and post‐transcriptional modifications during seed imbibition that controls seed adaptive responses to environmental cues. High‐throughput technologies have brought significant progress in the understanding of this phenomenon and have led to identify major regulators of seed germination, mostly by studying the behaviour of highly differentially expressed genes. However, the actual models of transcriptome analysis cannot catch additive effects of small variations of gene expression in individual signalling or metabolic pathways, which are also likely to control germination. Therefore, the comprehension of the molecular mechanism regulating germination is still incomplete and to gain knowledge about this process we have developed a pathway‐based analysis of transcriptomic Arabidopsis datasets, to identify regulatory actors of seed germination. The method allowed quantifying the level of deregulation of a wide range of pathways in dormant versus non‐dormant seeds. Clustering pathway deregulation scores of germinating and dormant seed samples permitted the identification of mechanisms involved in seed germination such as RNA transport or vitamin B6 metabolism, for example. Using this method, which was validated by metabolomics analysis, we also demonstrated that Col and Cvi seeds follow different metabolic routes for completing germination, demonstrating the genetic plasticity of this process. We finally provided an extensive basis of analysed transcriptomic datasets that will allow further identification of mechanisms controlling seed germination.

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