RNA m 6 A Methylation Control Salt Response by Affecting Photosynthesis Capacity

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Abstract

Soil salinization is a major abiotic stress constraining global plant growth. Epigenetic regulation particularly RNA modifications like N6-methyladenosine (m 6 A) is crucial for plant stress responses, the specific role of m 6 A in salt tolerance remains unclearly defined. Here, we show that Arabidopsis mutants deficient in m 6 A writers or readers exhibit heightened salt sensitivity at both growth and physiological levels. Global m 6 A modification levels increase following salt stress which results in a significant elevation of m 6 A signature throughout the Arabidopsis transcriptome. Spatiotemporal analysis through standardized read density of MeRIP-seq uncovered a significant salt-induced redistribution of m 6 A modification patterns. More than 80% m 6 A reads locate around the stop codon within 3’-untranslated regions and tend to increase under salt stress. A total of 9,986 peaks aligned into 8,667 coding gene showing significant changes in m 6 A modification levels. By associating with gene expression profiling, 840 salt-responsive genes display significant alterations in m 6 A enriched level and negative regulation pattern happens in most of genes. The salt responsive genes showing increased m 6 A methylation but significantly decreased expression are focused which representatively enriched in photosynthesis pathway, and this suppression due to mRNA decay mediated by m 6 A modification. Photosynthetic capacity and chloroplast apparatus are impaired in m 6 A-dependent manner under salt stress. These results clarify the biological functions of m 6 A modification in plant response to salinity and uncover the specific role of RNA metabolism based on dynamic change pattern of m 6 A modification to cope with salt stress.

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