Establishment of single-cell transcriptional states during seed germination

Lim Chee Liew(La Trobe University), Yue You(The University of Melbourne), Lucas Auroux(La Trobe University), Marina Oliva(Australian Research Council), Marta Peirats‐Llobet(La Trobe University), Sophia Ng(Australian Research Council), Muluneh Tamiru‐Oli(Australian Research Council), Oliver Berkowitz(Australian Research Council), Uyen Vu Thuy Hong(Australian Research Council), Asha Haslem(La Trobe University), Tim Stuart(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Matthew E. Ritchie(The University of Melbourne), George W. Bassel(University of Warwick), Ryan Lister(Australian Research Council), James Whelan(Australian Research Council), Quentin Gouil(The University of Melbourne), Mathew G. Lewsey(Australian Research Council)
Nature Plants
September 10, 2024
Cited by 50Open Access
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Abstract

Germination involves highly dynamic transcriptional programs as the cells of seeds reactivate and express the functions necessary for establishment in the environment. Individual cell types have distinct roles within the embryo, so must therefore have cell type-specific gene expression and gene regulatory networks. We can better understand how the functions of different cell types are established and contribute to the embryo by determining how cell type-specific transcription begins and changes through germination. Here we describe a temporal analysis of the germinating Arabidopsis thaliana embryo at single-cell resolution. We define the highly dynamic cell type-specific patterns of gene expression and how these relate to changing cellular function as germination progresses. Underlying these are unique gene regulatory networks and transcription factor activity. We unexpectedly discover that most embryo cells transition through the same initial transcriptional state early in germination, even though cell identity has already been established during embryogenesis. Cells later transition to cell type-specific gene expression patterns. Furthermore, our analyses support previous findings that the earliest events leading to the induction of seed germination take place in the vasculature. Overall, our study constitutes a general framework with which to characterize Arabidopsis cell transcriptional states through seed germination, allowing investigation of different genotypes and other plant species whose seed strategies may differ.


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