Project description:Comparative transcriptome sequencing in leaf and root tissues of Control and Salt-treated Oryza sativa generated 52.2 and 17.29 million high-quality reads.
Project description:The R-loop is a common chromatin feature presented from prokaryotic to eukaryotic genomes and has been revealed to be involved in multiple cellular processes and associated with many human diseases. Here, we take the advantage of our recently developed ssDRIP-seq method to profile genome-wide R-loop levels and provided a first-hand R-loop atlas of Rice (Oryza sativa) at different developmental stages.
Project description:To evaluate the roles of gene regulation in Oryza sativa leaf, dynamic profiles of transcriptome were investigated in Oryza sativa L. spp. indica with different treatments, the aerial tissues of one-month-old plants from four different areas (groups 1–4) were treated with 0, 40 mL of 25% azoxystrobin, 0.01 g of VdAL, or 40 mL of 25% azoxystrobin plus 0.01 g VdAL, respectively.
Project description:Lysine acetylation is a dynamic and reversible post-translational modification that plays an imporant role in the gene transcription regulation. Here, we report high quality proteome-scale data for lysine-acetylation sites and proteins in rice (Oryza sativa). A total of 1337 Kac sites in 716 Kac proteins with diverse biological functions and subcellular localizations were identified in rice seedlings.
Project description:Here, we first reported the construction of a phosphoproteomic landscape of 6 tissues, including callus, leaves, roots, shoot meristem (SM), young panicles (YP) and mature panicles (MP), from Nipponbare (Oryza sativa ssp. japonica). By employing a non-gel, quantitative phosphoproteomic approach, a total of 4792 phosphopeptides from 2657 phosphoproteins were identified, which were found to be differentially phosphorylated among tissues.
Project description:Iron toxicity is one of the most common mineral disorders affecting Oryza sativa production in flooded lowland fields. Efforts have been made to develop new rice varieties tolerant to Fe toxicity (+Fe). Oryza meridionalis is an endemic from Northern Australia and grows in regions with Fe rich soils, which may provide Fe tolerance genes and mechanisms that can be used for adaptive breeding. Aiming to understand tolerance mechanisms in rice, we screened a population of interspecific introgression lines (IL) from a cross between O. sativa and O. meridionalis for the identification of QTLs contributing to Fe excess tolerance. Six putative QTLs were identified. A line carrying one introgression from O. meridionalis on chromosome 9 associated with one QTL for leaf bronzing score was identified as tolerant in terms of lipid peroxidation and electrolyte leakage despite presenting very high shoot Fe concentrations. Further physiological, biochemical, ionomic and transcriptomic analyses showed that the IL tolerance could be partly explained by Fe partitioning between the leaf sheath and culm. After the in silico construction of an interspecific hybrid genome to map the sequences from transcriptomic analysis, we identified 47 and 27 genes from O. meridionalis up and down-regulated, respectively, by Fe treatment on the tolerant IL. Among possible genes associated with shoot-based tolerance, we identified metallothionein-like proteins, genes from glutathione S-transferase family and transporters from ABC and Major Facilitator Superfamily. This is the first work to demonstrate that introgressions of O. meridionalis in O. sativa genome confer increased tolerance to +Fe