| Literature DB >> 24805235 |
Deepankar Pratap Singh1, Baptiste Saudemont2, Gérard Guglielmi3, Olivier Arnaiz4, Jean-François Goût5, Malgorzata Prajer6, Alexey Potekhin7, Ewa Przybòs6, Anne Aubusson-Fleury4, Simran Bhullar3, Khaled Bouhouche8, Maoussi Lhuillier-Akakpo9, Véronique Tanty3, Corinne Blugeon3, Adriana Alberti10, Karine Labadie10, Jean-Marc Aury10, Linda Sperling4, Sandra Duharcourt11, Eric Meyer3.
Abstract
In the ciliate Paramecium, transposable elements and their single-copy remnants are deleted during the development of somatic macronuclei from germline micronuclei, at each sexual generation. Deletions are targeted by scnRNAs, small RNAs produced from the germ line during meiosis that first scan the maternal macronuclear genome to identify missing sequences, and then allow the zygotic macronucleus to reproduce the same deletions. Here we show that this process accounts for the maternal inheritance of mating types in Paramecium tetraurelia, a long-standing problem in epigenetics. Mating type E depends on expression of the transmembrane protein mtA, and the default type O is determined during development by scnRNA-dependent excision of the mtA promoter. In the sibling species Paramecium septaurelia, mating type O is determined by coding-sequence deletions in a different gene, mtB, which is specifically required for mtA expression. These independently evolved mechanisms suggest frequent exaptation of the scnRNA pathway to regulate cellular genes and mediate transgenerational epigenetic inheritance of essential phenotypic polymorphisms.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24805235 DOI: 10.1038/nature13318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962