| Literature DB >> 31529551 |
Lanjuan Hu1,2, Ning Li1, Zhibin Zhang1, Xinchao Meng1, Qianli Dong1, Chunming Xu1, Lei Gong1, Bao Liu1.
Abstract
CG methylation (m CG) is essential for preserving genome stability in mammals, but this link remains obscure in plants. OsMET1-2, a major rice DNA methyltransferase, plays critical roles in maintaining m CG in rice. Null mutation of OsMET1-2 causes massive CG hypomethylation, rendering the mutant suitable to address the role of m CG in maintaining genome integrity in plants. Here, we analyzed m CG dynamics and genome stability in tissue cultures of OsMET1-2 homozygous (-/-) and heterozygous (+/-) mutants, and isogenic wild-type (WT). We found m CG levels in cultures of -/- were substantially lower than in those of WT and +/-, as expected. Unexpectedly, m CG levels in 1- and 3-year cultures of -/- were 77.6% and 48.7% higher, respectively, than in shoot, from which the cultures were initiated, suggesting substantial regain of m CG in -/- cultures, which contrasts to the general trend of m CG loss in all WT plant tissue cultures hitherto studied. Transpositional burst of diverse transposable elements (TEs) occurred only in -/- cultures, although no elevation of genome-wide mutation rate in the form of single nucleotide polymorphisms was detected. Altogether, our results establish an essential role of m CG in retaining TE immobility and hence genome stability in rice and likely in plants in general.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990Oryza sativazzm321990; DNA methylation; MET1; epigenetic dynamics; genome integrity; stress; tissue culture; transposable element
Year: 2019 PMID: 31529551 DOI: 10.1111/tpj.14531
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant J ISSN: 0960-7412 Impact factor: 6.417