J Integr Plant Biol.

• Resources •    

Pra-GE-ATLAS: Empowering Pinus radiata stress and breeding research through a multi-omics database

Víctor Roces1†*, María Jesús Cañal1, Juan Luis Mateo2 and Luis Valledor1*   

  1. 1. Plant Physiology, Department of Organisms and Systems Biology, Faculty of Biology and Biotechnology Institute of Asturias,University of Oviedo, Oviedo 33071, Spain
    2. Department of Informatics, University of Oviedo, Gijón 33204, Spain

    Present address: Department of Molecular Biology, Max Planck Institute for Biology Tübingen, Tübingen, 72076, Germany.
    *Correspondences: Víctor Roces (victor.fernandez@tuebingen.mpg.de); Luis Valledor (valledorluis@uniovi.es, Dr. Valledor is fully responsible for the distribution of all materials associated with this article)
  • Received:2024-07-01 Accepted:2025-05-07 Online:2025-06-12

Abstract: In recent decades, research on model organisms has significantly increased our understanding of core biological processes in plant science. However, this focus has created a substantial knowledge bottleneck due to the limited phylogenetic and ecological spectrum covered. Gymnosperms, especially conifers, represent a molecular and ecological diversity hotspot among seed plants. Despite their importance, research on these species is notably underrepresented, primarily due to a slower pace of investigation resulting from a lack of community-based resources and databases. To fill this gap, we developed the P(inus)ra(diata)-G(ene)E(xpression) (Pra-GE)-ATLAS, which consists of several tools and two main modules: transcriptomics and proteomics, presented in this work for the forestry commercial and stress-sensitive species Pinus radiata. We have summarized and centralized all the available information to provide a comprehensive view of the gene expression landscape. To illustrate how applications of the database lead to new biological insights, we have integrated multiple regulatory layers across tissues and stressors. While stress favors the retention of small introns, harmonized alternative splicing analyses reveal that genes with conifers' iconic large introns tend to be under constitutive regulation. Furthermore, the degree of convergence between stressors differed between regulatory layers, with proteomic responses remaining highly distinctive even through intergenerational memory tolerance. Overall, the Pra-GE-ATLAS aims to narrow the distance between angiosperms and gymnosperms resources, deepening our understanding of how characteristic pine features have evolved. Pra-GE-ATLAS DB is available at: http://pra-ge-atlas.valmei.es.

Key words: atlas, database, gymnosperms, splicing, systems biology

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