A normalization method that controls for total RNA abundance affects the identification of differentially expressed genes, revealing bias toward morning-expressed responses.

Laosuntisuk K, Vennapusa A, Somayanda IM, Leman AR, Jagadish SK, Doherty CJ

Published: 30 January 2024 in The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology
Keywords: RNA-Seq, Sorghum bicolor, abiotic stress responses, diel transcriptional changes, gene expression, normalization methods
Pubmed ID: 38289828
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.16654

RNA-Sequencing is widely used to investigate changes in gene expression at the transcription level in plants. Most plant RNA-Seq analysis pipelines base the normalization approaches on the assumption that total transcript levels do not vary between samples. However, this assumption has not been demonstrated. In fact, many common experimental treatments and genetic alterations affect transcription efficiency or RNA stability, resulting in unequal transcript abundance. The addition of synthetic RNA controls is a simple correction that controls for variation in total mRNA levels. However, adding spike-ins appropriately is challenging with complex plant tissue, and carefully considering how they are added is essential to their successful use. We demonstrate that adding external RNA spike-ins as a normalization control produces differences in RNA-Seq analysis compared to traditional normalization methods, even between two times of day in untreated plants. We illustrate the use of RNA spike-ins with 3' RNA-Seq and present a normalization pipeline that accounts for differences in total transcriptional levels. We evaluate the effect of normalization methods on identifying differentially expressed genes in the context of identifying the effect of the time of day on gene expression and response to chilling stress in sorghum.

Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) D19AP00026
Development and Promotion of Science and Technology Talents Project (DPST), Thailand no grant ID listed
National Science Foundation 2210293