
Rice Science ›› 2026, Vol. 33 ›› Issue (3): 392-410.DOI: 10.1016/j.rsci.2026.03.002
• Research Papers • Previous Articles
Li Xinyi1,2,#, Huang Junying1,2,#, Zhou Dahu1,2,#, Cai Yicong1,2, Chen Xiaorong1,2, Hu Lifang1,2, Ouyang Linjuan1,2, Fu Junru1,2, Li Qingshun3, He Haohua1,2(
), Fu Haihui1,2(
)
Received:2025-12-04
Accepted:2026-03-06
Online:2026-05-28
Published:2026-06-02
Contact:
Fu Haihui (fhh819@163.com);
He Haohua (hhhua64@163.com)
About author:#These authors contributed equally to this work
Li Xinyi, Huang Junying, Zhou Dahu, Cai Yicong, Chen Xiaorong, Hu Lifang, Ouyang Linjuan, Fu Junru, Li Qingshun, He Haohua, Fu Haihui. Global Patterns of Stage-Specific Alternative Polyadenylation in Rice Tillering Revealed by Nanopore Long Read Sequencing and Proteomics[J]. Rice Science, 2026, 33(3): 392-410.
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Fig. 1. Dynamic regulation of alternative polyadenylation (APA) during the rice tillering stage. A, Scheme diagram of experimental design. Iso-seq, Isoform sequencing. B, Distribution of poly(A) clusters (PACs) in various genic regions. UTR, Untranslated region; CDS, Coding sequence. C, Distribution of PAC numbers per gene. D, Statistical analysis of 3′UTR length changes. The horizontal axis represents the 3ʹUTR length of the control group (SP), and the vertical axis represents the 3ʹUTR length of the experimental groups (EP, MP, and LP). Significance was evaluated using a two-tailed exact binomial test; P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant, indicating a significant bias toward shortening or lengthening. ‘L’ and blue points refer to APA genes with 3′UTR lengthening; ‘S’ and red points refer to APA genes with 3′UTR shortening; gray dots represent genes with no significant change in 3ʹUTR length. SP, Seedling period as control group; EP, Early period of tillering; MP, Middle period of tillering; LP, Later period of tillering. E, Distribution of r of poly(A) sites during effective (EP) and ineffective (LP) tillering stages. The parameter r represents the Pearson correlation coefficient that reflects changes in the relative usage of distal versus proximal poly(A) sites for each gene between the treatment and control groups. Asterisks indicate significant differences by means of Student’s t-test (****, P < 0.0001).
Fig. 2. Role of alternative polyadenylation (APA) genes during the tillering stage of rice. A, Venn diagram showing overlap between differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and genes with differential APA (deAPA-genes). The significance of the overlap was evaluated using a hypergeometric test (equivalent to Fisher’s exact test), with P-values calculated using a normal approximation; P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. B‒D, Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis during EP (B), MP (C), and LP (D). E, Heatmap showing expression levels of APA genes related to tillering and senescence. Gene identifiers: OsTB1/FC1, Os03g0706500; OsSPL14/IPA1, Os08g0509600; OsGS2, Os04g0659100; OsGH3.8/OsMGH3, Os07g0592600; OsSnRK1a, Os05g0530500; OsLSD1, Os08g0159500; OsCOI1b, Os05g0449500; OsBP-73, Os03g0183100; OsSLR1/OsGAI, Os03g0707600; OsUBC5a, Os01g0658400; OsSAMS1, Os05g0135700; CRCT, Os05g0595300. FC, Fold change; L, APA genes with 3′UTR lengthening; S, APA genes with 3′UTR shortening. F, Visualization of 3ʹ untranslated region (UTR) length variations of APA genes related to tillering and senescence. Red arrows indicate the positions of poly(A) sites. SP, Seedling period as control group; EP, Early period of tillering; MP, Middle period of tillering; LP, Later period of tillering; Shortening, Genes with 3ʹUTR shortening; Lengthening, Genes with 3ʹUTR lengthening.
Fig. 3. Regulation of gene expression by alternative polyadenylation (APA). A, Relationship between 3ʹ untranslated region (UTR) length variation and gene expression. The horizontal axis represents experimental groups, and the vertical axis represents the logarithm of gene expression changes. Asterisks indicate significant differences by means of Student’s t-test (**, P < 0.01; ****, P < 0.0001). B, Distribution of poly(A) tail length and expression level. SP, Seedling period as control group; EP, Early period of tillering; MP, Middle period of tillering; LP, Later period of tillering; Lengthening, Genes with 3ʹUTR lengthening; Shortening, Genes with 3ʹUTR shortening.
Fig. 4. Combined analysis of transcriptome and proteome. A, Distribution of differentially expressed proteins (DEPs). FC, Fold change. log2 FC > 1 and log2 FC < -1 indicate upregulated and downregulated DEPs, respectively. B, Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) enrichment analysis of DEPs. C, Nine-quadrant plot of transcript-protein integration, which shows combined analysis of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and DEPs. The x-axis represents the log2 (fold change of transcripts), and the y-axis represents the log2 (fold change of proteins). ‘tran’ denotes transcript-level expression changes derived from transcriptomic data, and ‘prot’ denotes protein-level expression changes derived from proteomic data. Genes and proteins were classified into eight categories according to the direction and significance of expression changes at the transcript and protein levels. Specifically, tran_down.prot_up (dark green) indicates downregulated transcripts but upregulated proteins, tran_up.prot_up (true red) indicates coordinated upregulation at both levels, tran_down.prot_down (dark red) indicates coordinated downregulation at both levels, and tran_up.prot_down (gray) indicates upregulated transcripts but downregulated proteins. The remaining categories represent genes and proteins showing significant changes at only one level or no significant changes at either level. D, Venn diagram showing overlap between proteins with upregulated and downregulated transcript levels and their counterparts of alternative polyadenylation (APA) genes at both mRNA and protein levels. The yellow circle represents the corresponding genes with consistent trends at both mRNA and protein levels; the purple circle represents genes with inconsistent trends at both mRNA and protein levels; and the blue circle represents APA genes. The significance of the overlap was evaluated using a hypergeometric test (equivalent to Fisher’s exact test), with P-values calculated using a normal approximation; P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. E, Changes in mRNA (left) and protein (right) expression levels of DEG-DEP pairs. DEG, Genes with significant expression changes relative to controls; DEP, Proteins with significant expression changes relative to controls; PDUI, Percentage of distal poly(A) site usage index, which was used to estimate the relative usage of distal poly(A) sites. |PDUI| ≥ 0.05, P ≤ 0.05, and |log2FC| ≥ 1. F, Protein expression levels of APA genes. Asterisk indicates a significant difference by Student’s t-test (*, P < 0.05). G, Variations in mRNA and protein levels of APA genes. Data are mean ± SE (n = 2). Asterisks indicate significant differences compared with SP by ANOVA and Student’s t-test (**, P < 0.01; ***, P < 0.001; ns, Not significant). YGL8, Os01g0279100; ASL4, Os03g0315800; OsMORF9, Os08g0139100; RCN1, Os11g0152500. SP, Seedling period as control group; EP, Early period of tillering; Lengthening/L, Genes with 3ʹUTR lengthening; Shortening/S, Genes with 3ʹUTR shortening.
Fig. 5. Transcriptional and protein-level dynamics of core polyadenylation factors and poly(A) signal characteristics. A, Expression changes of core polyadenylation factors during the rice tillering stage. The samples were collected from tiller axillary buds, and Actin (Os03g0718100) gene was used as the internal control. Gene identifiers: FY, Os01g0951000; ESP4, Os01g0694400; ESP1, Os05g0513350; CFIm25, Os04g0683100; CFIm68, Os07g0187300; CLPS3, Os02g0217500; PABN-1, Os02g0757900; PABN-2, Os06g0219600. Data are mean ± SD (n = 3). Asterisks indicate significant differences compared with the control by ANOVA (*, P < 0.05; **, P < 0.01; ***, P < 0.001; ****, P < 0.0001). B, Protein expression changes of core polyadenylation factors. The samples were collected from tiller axillary buds, and Actin (Os03g0718100) was used as the internal control. Asterisks indicate significant differences compared with SP by Student’s t-test (*, P < 0.05; ns, Not significant). C, Single-nucleotide frequency upstream and downstream of poly(A) sites in genes with different 3ʹUTR lengths. Upper panels show poly(A) signals at proximal poly(A) sites of genes with 3′UTR shortening; lower panels show poly(A) signals at proximal poly(A) sites of genes with 3′UTR lengthening. The horizontal axis represents distance from the poly(A) site, and the vertical axis represents single-base proportion. NUE, Near upstream element; CE, Cleavage and polyadenylation element; FUE, Far upstream element. D, Poly(A) signal analysis of genes with different 3ʹUTR lengths. Upper panels show genes with 3′UTR shortening; lower panels show genes with 3′UTR lengthening. P-values for conserved poly(A) signals at proximal and distal poly(A) sites of genes with significantly changed 3ʹUTR lengths were analyzed by chi-square test. SP, Seedling period as control group; EP, Early period of tillering; MP, Middle period of tillering; LP, Later period of tillering.
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