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The ben1-1 Brassinosteroid-Catabolism Mutation Is Unstable Due to Epigenetic Modifications of the Intronic T-DNA Insertion

Loss-of-function genetic analysis plays a pivotal role in elucidating individual gene function as well as interactions among gene networks. The ease of gene tagging and cloning provided by transfer DNA (T-DNA) insertion mutants have led to their heavy use by the Arabidopsis research community. Howev...

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Autores principales: Sandhu, Kulbir Singh, Koirala, Pushpa Sharma, Neff, Michael M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Genetics Society of America 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3755919/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23893742
http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/g3.113.006353
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author Sandhu, Kulbir Singh
Koirala, Pushpa Sharma
Neff, Michael M.
author_facet Sandhu, Kulbir Singh
Koirala, Pushpa Sharma
Neff, Michael M.
author_sort Sandhu, Kulbir Singh
collection PubMed
description Loss-of-function genetic analysis plays a pivotal role in elucidating individual gene function as well as interactions among gene networks. The ease of gene tagging and cloning provided by transfer DNA (T-DNA) insertion mutants have led to their heavy use by the Arabidopsis research community. However, certain aspects of T-DNA alleles require caution, as highlighted in this study of an intronic insertion mutant (ben1-1) in the BEN1 (BRI1-5 ENHANCED 1) gene. As a part of our analysis of brassinosteroid catabolic enzymes, we generated a genetic triple-mutant from a cross between the bas1-2 sob7-1 double-null (T-DNA exonic insertion mutants of phyB-4 ACTIVATION TAGGED SUPPRESSOR 1 and SUPPRESSOR OF phyB-4 7) and ben1-1. As previously described, the single ben1-1 line behaves as a transcript null. However, in the triple-mutant background ben1-1 was reverted to a partial loss-of-function allele showing enhanced levels of the wild-type-spliced transcript. Interestingly, the enhanced expression of BEN1 remained stable when the ben1-1 single-mutant was reisolated from a cross with the wild type. In addition, the two genetically identical pretriple and posttriple ben1-1 mutants also differed phenotypically. The previously functional NPTII (NEOMYCIN PHOSPHOTRANSFERASE II) T-DNA marker gene (which encodes kanamycin resistance) was no longer functional in the recovered ben1-1 allele, though the length of the T-DNA insertion and the NPTII gene sequence did not change in the pretriple and posttriple ben1-1 mutants. Methylation analysis using both restriction endonuclease activity and bisulfite conversion followed by sequencing showed that the methylation status of the T-DNA is different between the original and the recovered ben1-1. These observations demonstrate that the recovered ben1-1 mutant is epigenetically different from the original ben1-1 allele.
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spelling pubmed-37559192013-09-01 The ben1-1 Brassinosteroid-Catabolism Mutation Is Unstable Due to Epigenetic Modifications of the Intronic T-DNA Insertion Sandhu, Kulbir Singh Koirala, Pushpa Sharma Neff, Michael M. G3 (Bethesda) Investigations Loss-of-function genetic analysis plays a pivotal role in elucidating individual gene function as well as interactions among gene networks. The ease of gene tagging and cloning provided by transfer DNA (T-DNA) insertion mutants have led to their heavy use by the Arabidopsis research community. However, certain aspects of T-DNA alleles require caution, as highlighted in this study of an intronic insertion mutant (ben1-1) in the BEN1 (BRI1-5 ENHANCED 1) gene. As a part of our analysis of brassinosteroid catabolic enzymes, we generated a genetic triple-mutant from a cross between the bas1-2 sob7-1 double-null (T-DNA exonic insertion mutants of phyB-4 ACTIVATION TAGGED SUPPRESSOR 1 and SUPPRESSOR OF phyB-4 7) and ben1-1. As previously described, the single ben1-1 line behaves as a transcript null. However, in the triple-mutant background ben1-1 was reverted to a partial loss-of-function allele showing enhanced levels of the wild-type-spliced transcript. Interestingly, the enhanced expression of BEN1 remained stable when the ben1-1 single-mutant was reisolated from a cross with the wild type. In addition, the two genetically identical pretriple and posttriple ben1-1 mutants also differed phenotypically. The previously functional NPTII (NEOMYCIN PHOSPHOTRANSFERASE II) T-DNA marker gene (which encodes kanamycin resistance) was no longer functional in the recovered ben1-1 allele, though the length of the T-DNA insertion and the NPTII gene sequence did not change in the pretriple and posttriple ben1-1 mutants. Methylation analysis using both restriction endonuclease activity and bisulfite conversion followed by sequencing showed that the methylation status of the T-DNA is different between the original and the recovered ben1-1. These observations demonstrate that the recovered ben1-1 mutant is epigenetically different from the original ben1-1 allele. Genetics Society of America 2013-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3755919/ /pubmed/23893742 http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/g3.113.006353 Text en Copyright © 2013 Sandhu et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Unported License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Investigations
Sandhu, Kulbir Singh
Koirala, Pushpa Sharma
Neff, Michael M.
The ben1-1 Brassinosteroid-Catabolism Mutation Is Unstable Due to Epigenetic Modifications of the Intronic T-DNA Insertion
title The ben1-1 Brassinosteroid-Catabolism Mutation Is Unstable Due to Epigenetic Modifications of the Intronic T-DNA Insertion
title_full The ben1-1 Brassinosteroid-Catabolism Mutation Is Unstable Due to Epigenetic Modifications of the Intronic T-DNA Insertion
title_fullStr The ben1-1 Brassinosteroid-Catabolism Mutation Is Unstable Due to Epigenetic Modifications of the Intronic T-DNA Insertion
title_full_unstemmed The ben1-1 Brassinosteroid-Catabolism Mutation Is Unstable Due to Epigenetic Modifications of the Intronic T-DNA Insertion
title_short The ben1-1 Brassinosteroid-Catabolism Mutation Is Unstable Due to Epigenetic Modifications of the Intronic T-DNA Insertion
title_sort ben1-1 brassinosteroid-catabolism mutation is unstable due to epigenetic modifications of the intronic t-dna insertion
topic Investigations
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3755919/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23893742
http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/g3.113.006353
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