A deletion/duplication in the Ligon lintless-2 locus induces siRNAs that inhibit cotton fiber cell elongation

Plant Physiol. 2022 Oct 27;190(3):1792-1805. doi: 10.1093/plphys/kiac384.

Abstract

Most cultivated cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) varieties have two types of seed fibers: short fuzz fiber strongly adhered to the seed coat, and long lint fiber used in the textile industry. The Ligon lintless-2 (Li2) cotton mutant has a normal vegetative phenotype but produces very short lint fiber on the seeds. The Li2 mutation is controlled by a single dominant gene. We discovered a large structural rearrangement at the end of chromosome D13 in the Li2 mutant based on whole-genome sequencing and genetic mapping of segregating populations. The rearrangement contains a 177-kb deletion and a 221-kb duplication positioned as a tandem inverted repeat. The gene Gh_D13G2437 is located at the junction of the inverted repeat in the duplicated region. During transcription such structure spontaneously forms self-complementary hairpin RNA of Gh_D13G2437 followed by production of small interfering RNA (siRNA). Gh_D13G2437 encodes a Ran-Binding Protein 1 (RanBP1) that preferentially expresses during cotton fiber elongation. The abundance of siRNA produced from Gh_D13G2437 reciprocally corresponds with the abundance of highly homologous (68%-98% amino acid sequence identity) RanBP1 family transcripts during fiber elongation, resulting in a shorter fiber phenotype in the Li2. Overexpression of Gh_D13G2437 in the Li2 mutant recovered the long lint fiber phenotype. Taken together, our findings revealed that siRNA-induced silencing of a family of RanBP1s inhibit elongation of cotton fiber cells in the Li2 mutant.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Cotton Fiber*
  • Gene Expression Regulation, Plant
  • Genes, Plant*
  • Gossypium / metabolism
  • RNA, Small Interfering / genetics
  • RNA, Small Interfering / metabolism

Substances

  • RNA, Small Interfering