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Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
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Soil salinity is one of the major threats to agricultural productivity worldwide. Salt stress exposure alters root and shoots growth rates, thereby affecting overall plant performance. While past studies have extensively documented the effect of salt stress on root elongation and shoot development separately, here we take an innovative approach by examining the coordination of root and shoot growth under salt stress conditions. Utilizing a newly developed tool for quantifying the root:shoot ratio in agar-grownArabidopsisseedlings, we found that salt stress results in a loss of coordination between root and shoot growth rates. We identify a specific gene cluster encoding domain-of-unknown-function 247 (DUF247), and characterize one of these genes asSaltRoot:shootRatioRegulatorGene (SR3G). Further analysis elucidates the role of SR3G as a negative regulator of salt stress tolerance, revealing its function in regulating shoot growth, root suberization, and sodium accumulation. We further characterize thatSR3Gexpression is modulated byWRKY75transcription factor, known as a positive regulator of salt stress tolerance. Finally, we show that the salt stress sensitivity ofwrky75mutant is completely diminished when it is combined withsr3gmutation. Together, our results demonstrate that utilizing root:shoot ratio as an architectural feature leads to the discovery of a new stress resilience gene. The study’s innovative approach and findings not only contribute to our understanding of plant stress tolerance mechanisms but also open new avenues for genetic and agronomic strategies to enhance crop environmental resilience.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available March 28, 2026
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Abstract How the noncoding genome affects cellular functions is a key biological question. A particular challenge is to distinguish the effects of noncoding DNA elements from long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) that coincide at the same loci. Here, we identified the flowering‐associated intergenic lncRNA (FLAIL) inArabidopsisthrough early floweringflailmutants. Expression ofFLAILRNA from a different chromosomal location in combination with strand‐specific RNA knockdown characterizedFLAILas a trans‐acting RNA molecule.FLAILdirectly binds to differentially expressed target genes that control flowering via RNA–DNA interactions through conserved sequence motifs.FLAILinteracts with protein and RNA components of the spliceosome to affect target mRNA expression through co‐transcriptional alternative splicing (AS) and linked chromatin regulation. In the absence ofFLAIL, splicing defects at the direct FLAIL target flowering gene LACCASE 8 (LAC8) correlated with reduced mRNA expression. Double mutant analyses support a model whereFLAIL‐mediated splicing of LAC8 promotes its mRNA expression and represses flowering. Our study suggests lncRNAs as accessory components of the spliceosome that regulate AS and gene expression to impact organismal development.more » « less
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