posted on 2024-01-09, 05:33authored byTianqi Zhao, Ping Tang, Chonglan Liu, Rubin Zuo, Shunyu Su, Yuanyuan Zhong, Yongjie Li, Jing Yang
Rice
(Oryza sativa) is a crucial crop,
achieving
high yield concurrent pathogen resistance remains a challenge. Transcription
factors play roles in growth and abiotic tolerance. However, rice
phytochrome-interacting factor-like 1 (OsPIL1) in
pathogen resistance and agronomic traits remains unexplored. We generated OsPIL1 overexpressing (OsPIL1 OE) rice
lines and evaluated their impact on growth, grain development, and
resistance to Magnaporthe oryzae. Multiomics analysis
(RNA-seq, metabolomics, and CUT&Tag) and RT-qPCR validated OsPIL1 target genes and key metabolites. In the results, OsPIL1 OE rice lines exhibited robust growth, longer grains,
and enhanced resistance to M. oryzae without compromising
growth. Integrative multiomics analysis revealed a coordinated regulatory
network centered on OsPIL1, explaining these desirable
traits. OsPIL1 likely acts as a positive regulator,
targeting transcriptional elements or specific genes with direct functions
in several biological programs. In particular, a range of key signaling
genes (phosphatases, kinases, plant hormone genes, transcription factors),
and metabolites (linolenic acid, vitamin E, trigonelline, d-glucose, serotonin, choline, genistein, riboflavin) contributed
to enhanced rice growth, grain size, pathogen resistance, or a combination
of these traits. These findings highlight OsPIL1’s
regulatory role in promoting important traits and provide insights
into potential strategies for rice breeding.