loading page

Histone variant H2A.Z is required for plant salt response by regulating gene transcription
  • +6
  • Aiqin Zhang,
  • Rongqing Miao,
  • Yue Zhang,
  • Xinxin Liu,
  • Yue Yuan,
  • Wei Zang,
  • Zhiqi Li,
  • Xiufeng Yan,
  • Qiuying Pang
Aiqin Zhang
Northeast Forestry University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

Author Profile
Rongqing Miao
Northeast Forestry University
Author Profile
Yue Zhang
Northeast Forestry University
Author Profile
Xinxin Liu
Northeast Forestry University
Author Profile
Yue Yuan
Northeast Forestry University
Author Profile
Wei Zang
Northeast Forestry University
Author Profile
Zhiqi Li
Northeast Forestry University
Author Profile
Xiufeng Yan
Wenzhou University College of Life and Environmental Science
Author Profile
Qiuying Pang
Northeast Forestry University
Author Profile

Abstract

As a well-conserved histone variant, H2A.Z epigenetically regulates plant growth and development as well as the interaction with environmental factors. However, the role of H2A.Z in response to salt stress remains unclear, and whether nucleosomal H2A.Z occupancy work on the gene responsiveness upon salinity is obscure. Here, we elucidate the involvement of H2A.Z in salt response by analyzing H2A.Z disorder plants with impaired or overloaded H2A.Z deposition. The salt tolerance is dramatically accompanied by H2A.Z deficiency and reacquired in H2A.Z OE lines. H2A.Z disorder changes the expression profiles of large-scale of salt responsive genes, announcing that H2A.Z is required for plant salt response. Genome-wide H2A.Z mapping shows that H2A.Z level is induced by salt condition across promoter, TSS and TES (-1 kb to +1kb), the peaks preferentially enrich at promoter regions near TSS. We further show that H2A.Z deposition within TSS provides a direct role on transcriptional control, which has both repressive and activating effects, while it is found generally H2A.Z enrichment negatively correlate with gene expression level response to salt stress. This study shed light on the H2A.Z function in salt tolerance, highlighting the complex regulatory mechanisms of H2A.Z on transcriptional activity for yielding appropriate responses to particularly environmental stress.
16 Nov 2023Submitted to Plant, Cell & Environment
16 Nov 2023Assigned to Editor
16 Nov 2023Submission Checks Completed
18 Nov 2023Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
12 Feb 2024Submission Checks Completed
12 Feb 2024Assigned to Editor
13 Feb 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
04 Mar 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned