10 research outputs found
Postembryonic establishment of megabase-scale gene silencing in nucleolar dominance
Nucleolar dominance is an epigenetic phenomenon in plant and animal genetic hybrids that describes the expression of 45S
ribosomal RNA genes (rRNA genes) inherited from only one progenitor due to the silencing of the other progenitor’s rRNA genes.
rRNA genes are tandemly arrayed at nucleolus organizer regions (NORs) that span millions of basepairs, thus gene silencing in
nucleolar dominance occurs on a scale second only to X-chromosome inactivation in female mammals. In Arabidopsis suecica, the
allotetraploid hybrid of A. thaliana and A. arenosa, theA. thaliana –derived rRNA genes are subjected to nucleolar dominance and
are silenced via repressive chromatin modifications. However, the developmental stage at which nucleolar dominance is
established in A. suecica is currently unknown. We show that nucleolar dominance is not apparent in seedling cotyledons formed
during embryogenesis but becomes progressively established during early postembryonic development in tissues derived from
both the shoot and root apical meristems. The progressive silencing of A. thaliana rRNA genes correlates with the transition of A.
thaliana NORs from a decondensed euchromatic state associated with histone H3 that is trimethylated on lysine 4 (H3K4me3) to
a highly condensed heterochromatic state in which the NORs are associated with H3K9me2 and 5-methylcytosine-enriched
chromocenters. In RNAi-lines in which the histone deacetylases HDA6 and HDT1 are knocked down, the developmentally
regulated condensation and inactivation of A. thaliana NORs is disrupted. Collectively, these data demonstrate that HDA6 and
HDT1 function in the postembryonic establishment of nucleolar dominance, a process which recurs in each generatio
Interplay of ribosomal DNA Loci in nucleolar dominance: dominant NORs are up-regulated by chromatin dynamics in the wheat-rye system
Background: Chromatin organizational and topological plasticity, and its functions in gene expression regulation, have
been strongly revealed by the analysis of nucleolar dominance in hybrids and polyploids where one parental set of
ribosomal RNA (rDNA) genes that are clustered in nucleolar organizing regions (NORs), is rendered silent by epigenetic
pathways and heterochromatization. However, information on the behaviour of dominant NORs is very sparse and needed
for an integrative knowledge of differential gene transcription levels and chromatin specific domain interactions.
Methodology/Principal Findings: Using molecular and cytological approaches in a wheat-rye addition line (wheat genome
plus the rye nucleolar chromosome pair 1R), we investigated transcriptional activity and chromatin topology of the wheat
dominant NORs in a nucleolar dominance situation. Herein we report dominant NORs up-regulation in the addition line
through quantitative real-time PCR and silver-staining technique. Accompanying this modification in wheat rDNA
trascription level, we also disclose that perinucleolar knobs of ribosomal chromatin are almost transcriptionally silent due to
the residual detection of BrUTP incorporation in these domains, contrary to the marked labelling of intranucleolar
condensed rDNA. Further, by comparative confocal analysis of nuclei probed to wheat and rye NORs, we found that in the
wheat-rye addition line there is a significant decrease in the number of wheat-origin perinucleolar rDNA knobs,
corresponding to a diminution of the rDNA heterochromatic fraction of the dominant (wheat) NORs.
Conclusions/Significance: We demonstrate that inter-specific interactions leading to wheat-origin NOR dominance results not
only on the silencing of rye origin NOR loci, but dominant NORs are alsomodified in their transcriptional activity and interphase
organization. The results show a cross-talk between wheat and rye NORs, mediated by ribosomal chromatin dynamics,
revealing a conceptual shift from differential amphiplasty to ‘mutual amphiplasty’ in the nucleolar dominance process.This work was supported by the Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (projects POCI/BIA-BDE/57575/2004 to M.S. and POCI/BIA-BCM/59389/2004 to N.N.
Epistatic and allelic interactions control expression of ribosomal RNA gene clusters in Arabidopsis thaliana
Synaptonemal complexes and chromosome chains in the rodent Ellobius talpinus heterozygous for ten Robertsonian translocations
Physical mapping by FISH and GISH of rDNA loci and discrimination of genomes A and B inScilla scilloides complex distributed in Korea
Confocal observations of late-acting self-incompatibility in Theobroma cacao L.
Cocoa (Theobroma cacao) has an idiosyncratic form of late-acting self-incompatibility that operates through the non-fusion of incompatible gametes. Here, we used high-resolution confocal microscopy to define fine level changes to the embryo sac of the strongly selfincompatible cocoa genotype SCA 24 in the absence of pollination, and following compatible and incompatible pollination. All sperm nuclei had fused with the female nuclei by 48 h following compatible pollinations. However, following incompatible pollinations, we observed divergence in the behaviour of sperm nuclei following release into the embryo sac. Incomplete sperm nucleus migration occurred in approximately half of the embryo sacs, where the sperm nuclei had so far failed to reach the female gamete nuclei. Sperm nuclei reached but did not fuse with the female gamete nuclei in the residual cases. We argue that the cellular mechanisms governing sperm nucleus migration to the egg nucleus and those controlling subsequent nuclear fusion are likely to differ and should be considered independently. Accordingly, we recommend that future efforts to characterise the genetic basis of LSI in cocoa should take care to differentiate between these two events, both of which contribute to failed karyogamy. Implications of these results for continuing efforts to gain better understanding of the genetic control of LSI in cocoa are discussed.Caroline S. Ford and Mike J. Wilkinso
