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Epigenetic Natural Variation in Arabidopsis thaliana

Cytosine methylation of repetitive sequences is widespread in plant genomes, occurring in both symmetric (CpG and CpNpG) as well as asymmetric sequence contexts. We used the methylation-dependent restriction enzyme McrBC to profile methylated DNA using tiling microarrays of Arabidopsis Chromosome 4...

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Autores principales: Vaughn, Matthew W, Tanurdžić, Miloš, Lippman, Zachary, Jiang, Hongmei, Carrasquillo, Robert, Rabinowicz, Pablo D, Dedhia, Neilay, McCombie, W. Richard, Agier, Nicolas, Bulski, Agnès, Colot, Vincent, Doerge, R.W, Martienssen, Robert A
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1892575/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17579518
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050174
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author Vaughn, Matthew W
Tanurdžić, Miloš
Lippman, Zachary
Jiang, Hongmei
Carrasquillo, Robert
Rabinowicz, Pablo D
Dedhia, Neilay
McCombie, W. Richard
Agier, Nicolas
Bulski, Agnès
Colot, Vincent
Doerge, R.W
Martienssen, Robert A
author_facet Vaughn, Matthew W
Tanurdžić, Miloš
Lippman, Zachary
Jiang, Hongmei
Carrasquillo, Robert
Rabinowicz, Pablo D
Dedhia, Neilay
McCombie, W. Richard
Agier, Nicolas
Bulski, Agnès
Colot, Vincent
Doerge, R.W
Martienssen, Robert A
author_sort Vaughn, Matthew W
collection PubMed
description Cytosine methylation of repetitive sequences is widespread in plant genomes, occurring in both symmetric (CpG and CpNpG) as well as asymmetric sequence contexts. We used the methylation-dependent restriction enzyme McrBC to profile methylated DNA using tiling microarrays of Arabidopsis Chromosome 4 in two distinct ecotypes, Columbia and Landsberg erecta. We also used comparative genome hybridization to profile copy number polymorphisms. Repeated sequences and transposable elements (TEs), especially long terminal repeat retrotransposons, are densely methylated, but one third of genes also have low but detectable methylation in their transcribed regions. While TEs are almost always methylated, genic methylation is highly polymorphic, with half of all methylated genes being methylated in only one of the two ecotypes. A survey of loci in 96 Arabidopsis accessions revealed a similar degree of methylation polymorphism. Within-gene methylation is heritable, but is lost at a high frequency in segregating F (2) families. Promoter methylation is rare, and gene expression is not generally affected by differences in DNA methylation. Small interfering RNA are preferentially associated with methylated TEs, but not with methylated genes, indicating that most genic methylation is not guided by small interfering RNA. This may account for the instability of gene methylation, if occasional failure of maintenance methylation cannot be restored by other means.
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spelling pubmed-18925752007-07-14 Epigenetic Natural Variation in Arabidopsis thaliana Vaughn, Matthew W Tanurdžić, Miloš Lippman, Zachary Jiang, Hongmei Carrasquillo, Robert Rabinowicz, Pablo D Dedhia, Neilay McCombie, W. Richard Agier, Nicolas Bulski, Agnès Colot, Vincent Doerge, R.W Martienssen, Robert A PLoS Biol Research Article Cytosine methylation of repetitive sequences is widespread in plant genomes, occurring in both symmetric (CpG and CpNpG) as well as asymmetric sequence contexts. We used the methylation-dependent restriction enzyme McrBC to profile methylated DNA using tiling microarrays of Arabidopsis Chromosome 4 in two distinct ecotypes, Columbia and Landsberg erecta. We also used comparative genome hybridization to profile copy number polymorphisms. Repeated sequences and transposable elements (TEs), especially long terminal repeat retrotransposons, are densely methylated, but one third of genes also have low but detectable methylation in their transcribed regions. While TEs are almost always methylated, genic methylation is highly polymorphic, with half of all methylated genes being methylated in only one of the two ecotypes. A survey of loci in 96 Arabidopsis accessions revealed a similar degree of methylation polymorphism. Within-gene methylation is heritable, but is lost at a high frequency in segregating F (2) families. Promoter methylation is rare, and gene expression is not generally affected by differences in DNA methylation. Small interfering RNA are preferentially associated with methylated TEs, but not with methylated genes, indicating that most genic methylation is not guided by small interfering RNA. This may account for the instability of gene methylation, if occasional failure of maintenance methylation cannot be restored by other means. Public Library of Science 2007-07 2007-06-19 /pmc/articles/PMC1892575/ /pubmed/17579518 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050174 Text en © 2007 Vaughn et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vaughn, Matthew W
Tanurdžić, Miloš
Lippman, Zachary
Jiang, Hongmei
Carrasquillo, Robert
Rabinowicz, Pablo D
Dedhia, Neilay
McCombie, W. Richard
Agier, Nicolas
Bulski, Agnès
Colot, Vincent
Doerge, R.W
Martienssen, Robert A
Epigenetic Natural Variation in Arabidopsis thaliana
title Epigenetic Natural Variation in Arabidopsis thaliana
title_full Epigenetic Natural Variation in Arabidopsis thaliana
title_fullStr Epigenetic Natural Variation in Arabidopsis thaliana
title_full_unstemmed Epigenetic Natural Variation in Arabidopsis thaliana
title_short Epigenetic Natural Variation in Arabidopsis thaliana
title_sort epigenetic natural variation in arabidopsis thaliana
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1892575/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17579518
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050174
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