| Literature DB >> 25002488 |
Lanjuan Hu1, Ning Li1, Chunming Xu1, Silin Zhong2, Xiuyun Lin3, Jingjing Yang1, Tianqi Zhou1, Anzhi Yuliang1, Ying Wu1, Yun-Ru Chen4, Xiaofeng Cao5, Assaf Zemach6, Sachin Rustgi7, Diter von Wettstein8, Bao Liu9.
Abstract
Cytosine methylation at CG sites ((m)CG) plays critical roles in development, epigenetic inheritance, and genome stability in mammals and plants. In the dicot model plant Arabidopsis thaliana, methyltransferase 1 (MET1), a principal CG methylase, functions to maintain (m)CG during DNA replication, with its null mutation resulting in global hypomethylation and pleiotropic developmental defects. Null mutation of a critical CG methylase has not been characterized at a whole-genome level in other higher eukaryotes, leaving the generality of the Arabidopsis findings largely speculative. Rice is a model plant of monocots, to which many of our important crops belong. Here we have characterized a null mutant of OsMet1-2, the major CG methylase in rice. We found that seeds homozygous for OsMet1-2 gene mutation (OsMET1-2(-/-)), which directly segregated from normal heterozygote plants (OsMET1-2(+/-)), were seriously maldeveloped, and all germinated seedlings underwent swift necrotic death. Compared with wild type, genome-wide loss of (m)CG occurred in the mutant methylome, which was accompanied by a plethora of quantitative molecular phenotypes including dysregulated expression of diverse protein-coding genes, activation and repression of transposable elements, and altered small RNA profiles. Our results have revealed conservation but also distinct functional differences in CG methylases between rice and Arabidopsis.Entities:
Keywords: Oryza sativa L.; monocotyledons
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25002488 PMCID: PMC4115543 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1410761111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205