65 research outputs found
Effects of Aneuploidy on Genome Structure, Expression, and Interphase Organization in Arabidopsis thaliana
Aneuploidy refers to losses and/or gains of individual chromosomes from the
normal chromosome set. The resulting gene dosage imbalance has a noticeable
affect on the phenotype, as illustrated by aneuploid syndromes, including Down
syndrome in humans, and by human solid tumor cells, which are highly aneuploid.
Although the phenotypic manifestations of aneuploidy are usually apparent,
information about the underlying alterations in structure, expression, and
interphase organization of unbalanced chromosome sets is still sparse. Plants
generally tolerate aneuploidy better than animals, and, through colchicine
treatment and breeding strategies, it is possible to obtain inbred sibling
plants with different numbers of chromosomes. This possibility, combined with
the genetic and genomics tools available for Arabidopsis
thaliana, provides a powerful means to assess systematically the
molecular and cytological consequences of aberrant numbers of specific
chromosomes. Here, we report on the generation of Arabidopsis
plants in which chromosome 5 is present in triplicate. We compare the global
transcript profiles of normal diploids and chromosome 5 trisomics, and assess
genome integrity using array comparative genome hybridization. We use live cell
imaging to determine the interphase 3D arrangement of transgene-encoded
fluorescent tags on chromosome 5 in trisomic and triploid plants. The results
indicate that trisomy 5 disrupts gene expression throughout the genome and
supports the production and/or retention of truncated copies of chromosome 5.
Although trisomy 5 does not grossly distort the interphase arrangement of
fluorescent-tagged sites on chromosome 5, it may somewhat enhance associations
between transgene alleles. Our analysis reveals the complex genomic changes that
can occur in aneuploids and underscores the importance of using multiple
experimental approaches to investigate how chromosome numerical changes
condition abnormal phenotypes and progressive genome instability
High frequency, cell type-specific visualization of fluorescent-tagged genomic sites in interphase and mitotic cells of living Arabidopsis plants
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Interphase chromosome organization and dynamics can be studied in living cells using fluorescent tagging techniques that exploit bacterial operator/repressor systems and auto-fluorescent proteins. A nuclear-localized Repressor Protein-Fluorescent Protein (RP-FP) fusion protein binds to operator repeats integrated as transgene arrays at defined locations in the genome. Under a fluorescence microscope, the tagged sites appear as bright fluorescent dots in living cells. This technique has been used successfully in plants, but is often hampered by low expression of genes encoding RP-FP fusion proteins, perhaps owing to one or more gene silencing mechanisms that are prevalent in plant cells.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We used two approaches to overcome this problem. First, we tested mutations in four factors involved in different types of gene silencing and/or epigenetic modifications for their effects on nuclear fluorescence. Only mutations in DDM1, a chromatin remodelling ATPase involved in repeat-induced heterochromatin formation and DNA methylation, released silencing of the RP-FP fusion protein. This result suggested that the operator repeats can trigger silencing of the adjacent gene encoding the RP-FP fusion protein. In the second approach, we transformed the tagged lines with a second T-DNA encoding the RP-FP fusion protein but lacking operator repeats. This strategy avoided operator repeat-induced gene silencing and increased the number of interphase nuclei displaying fluorescent dots. In a further extension of the technique, we show that green fluorescent-tagged sites can be visualized on moving mitotic chromosomes stained with red fluorescent-labelled histone H2B.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The results illustrate the propensity of operator repeat arrays to form heterochromatin that can silence the neighbouring gene encoding the RP-FP fusion protein. Supplying the RP-FP fusion protein in <it>trans </it>from a second T-DNA largely alleviates this problem. Depending on the promoter used to drive expression of the RP-FP fusion protein gene, the fluorescent tagged sites can be visualized at high frequency in different cell types. The ability to observe fluorescent dots on both interphase and mitotic chromosomes allows tagged sites to be tracked throughout the cell cycle. These improvements enhance the versatility of the fluorescent tagging technique for future studies of chromosome arrangement and dynamics in living plants.</p
Planting the Seeds of a New Paradigm
RNA-mediated gene silencing has emerged in recent years as an important mechanism for regulating gene expression. Some of the key discoveries have been made in plant
Distinct and concurrent pathways of Pol II-and Pol IV- dependent siRNA biogenesis at a repetitive trans-silencer locus in Arabidopsis thaliana
SUMMARY Short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) homologous to transcriptional regulatory regions can induce RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) and transcriptional gene silencing (TGS) of target genes. In our system, siRNAs are produced by transcribing an inverted DNA repeat (IR) of enhancer sequences, yielding a hairpin RNA that is processed by several Dicer activities into siRNAs of 21-24 nt. Primarily 24-nt siRNAs trigger RdDM of the target enhancer in trans and TGS of a downstream GFP reporter gene. We analyzed siRNA accumulation from two different structural forms of a trans-silencer locus in which tandem repeats are embedded in the enhancer IR and distinguished distinct RNA polymerase II (Pol II)-and Pol IV-dependent pathways of siRNA biogenesis. At the original silencer locus, Pol-II transcription of the IR from a 35S promoter produces a hairpin RNA that is diced into abundant siRNAs of 21-24 nt. A silencer variant lacking the 35S promoter revealed a normally masked Pol IV-dependent pathway that produces low levels of 24-nt siRNAs from the tandem repeats. Both pathways operate concurrently at the original silencer locus. siRNAs accrue only from specific regions of the enhancer and embedded tandem repeat. Analysis of these sequences and endogenous tandem repeats producing siRNAs revealed the preferential accumulation of siRNAs at GC-rich regions containing methylated CG dinucleotides. In addition to supporting a correlation between base composition, DNA methylation and siRNA accumulation, our results highlight the complexity of siRNA biogenesis at repetitive loci and show that Pol II and Pol IV use different promoters to transcribe the same template
AGO6 Functions in RNA-Mediated Transcriptional Gene Silencing in Shoot and Root Meristems in Arabidopsis thaliana
RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) is a small interfering RNA (siRNA)-mediated epigenetic modification that contributes to transposon silencing in plants. RdDM requires a complex transcriptional machinery that includes specialized RNA polymerases, named Pol IV and Pol V, as well as chromatin remodelling proteins, transcription factors, RNA binding proteins, and other plant-specific proteins whose functions are not yet clarified. In Arabidopsis thaliana, DICER-LIKE3 and members of the ARGONAUTE4 group of ARGONAUTE (AGO) proteins are involved, respectively, in generating and using 24-nt siRNAs that trigger methylation and transcriptional gene silencing of homologous promoter sequences. AGO4 is the main AGO protein implicated in the RdDM pathway. Here we report the identification of the related AGO6 in a forward genetic screen for mutants defective in RdDM and transcriptional gene silencing in shoot and root apical meristems in Arabidopsis thaliana. The identification of AGO6, and not AGO4, in our screen is consistent with the primary expression of AGO6 in shoot and root growing points
L'Alerte : journal indépendant : politique, littéraire et commercial
08 novembre 19201920/11/08 (A24)-1920/11/08
L'Infirmière française : revue mensuelle d'enseignement technique / directeur Prof Calmette,... ; rédacteurs en chef Dr Cruveilhier,... Dr Lafosse,...
janvier 19261926/01 (A3,N10)-1926/01
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