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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Alternative Splicing at the Intersection of Biological Timing, Development, and Stress Responses

Dorothee Staiger, +1 more
- 01 Oct 2013 - 
- Vol. 25, Iss: 10, pp 3640-3656
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TLDR
This review aims to bring together such examples to illustrate the extent and importance of AS, which are not always obvious from individual publications and to ensure that plant scientists are aware that AS is likely to occur in the genes that they study and that dynamic changes in AS and its consequences need to be considered routinely.
Abstract
High-throughput sequencing for transcript profiling in plants has revealed that alternative splicing (AS) affects a much higher proportion of the transcriptome than was previously assumed. AS is involved in most plant processes and is particularly prevalent in plants exposed to environmental stress. The identification of mutations in predicted splicing factors and spliceosomal proteins that affect cell fate, the circadian clock, plant defense, and tolerance/sensitivity to abiotic stress all point to a fundamental role of splicing/AS in plant growth, development, and responses to external cues. Splicing factors affect the AS of multiple downstream target genes, thereby transferring signals to alter gene expression via splicing factor/AS networks. The last two to three years have seen an ever-increasing number of examples of functional AS. At a time when the identification of AS in individual genes and at a global level is exploding, this review aims to bring together such examples to illustrate the extent and importance of AS, which are not always obvious from individual publications. It also aims to ensure that plant scientists are aware that AS is likely to occur in the genes that they study and that dynamic changes in AS and its consequences need to be considered routinely.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanism of Salinity Tolerance in Plants: Physiological, Biochemical, and Molecular Characterization

TL;DR: This paper provides a comprehensive review of major research advances on biochemical, physiological, and molecular mechanisms regulating plant adaptation and tolerance to salinity stress.
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Araport11: a complete reannotation of the Arabidopsis thaliana reference genome

TL;DR: This updated Arabidopsis genome annotation with a substantially increased resolution of gene models will not only further the understanding of the biological processes of this plant model but also of other species.
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Complexity of the Alternative Splicing Landscape in Plants

TL;DR: Widespread changes in AS in response to developmental cues and stresses suggest a role for regulated splicing in plant development and stress responses, and new tools based on recent technological advances are allowing genome-wide analysis of RNA elements in transcripts and of chromatin modifications that regulate AS.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unveiling the complexity of the maize transcriptome by single-molecule long-read sequencing

TL;DR: The results show that characterization of the maize B73 transcriptome is far from complete, and that maize gene expression is more complex than previously thought.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Spliceosome: Design Principles of a Dynamic RNP Machine

TL;DR: The spliceosome exhibits exceptional compositional and structural dynamics that are exploited during substrate-dependent complex assembly, catalytic activation, and active site remodeling in the pre-mRNAs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Expansion of the eukaryotic proteome by alternative splicing

TL;DR: It is now clear that the 'missing' information is in large part provided by alternative splicing, the process by which multiple different functional messenger RNAs, and therefore proteins, can be synthesized from a single gene.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genome sequence and analysis of the tuber crop potato.

Xun Xu, +96 more
- 10 Jul 2011 - 
TL;DR: The potato genome sequence provides a platform for genetic improvement of this vital crop and predicts 39,031 protein-coding genes and presents evidence for at least two genome duplication events indicative of a palaeopolyploid origin.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spliceosome structure and function.

TL;DR: The extensive interplay of RNA and proteins in aligning the pre-mRNA's reactive groups, and the presence of both RNA and protein at the core of the splicing machinery, suggest that the spliceosome is an RNP enzyme, but elucidation of the precise nature of its active site awaits the generation of a high-resolution structure of its RNP core.
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