Transgenerational increases in DNA methylation in Arabidopsis plants defective in active DNA demethylation

Author:

Tang Kai1,Zhu Xiaohong23,Xie Shaojun4,Lang Zhaobo5,Zhu Jian-Kang5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907

2. State Key Laboratory of Crop Stress Adaptation and Improvement, School of Life Sciences, Henan University, Kaifeng 475004, China

3. State Key Laboratory of Cotton Biology, Henan University, Kaifeng 475004, China

4. Bioinformatics Core, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907

5. Institute of Advanced Biotechnology and School of Medicine, Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen 518055, China

Abstract

Spontaneous gain or loss of DNA methylation occurs in plant and animal genomes, and DNA methylation changes can lead to meiotically stable epialleles that generate heritable phenotypic diversity. However, it is unclear whether transgenerational epigenetic stability may be regulated by any cellular factors. Here, we examined spontaneously occurring variations in DNA methylation in wild-type and ros1 mutant Arabidopsis plants that were propagated for ten generations from single-seed descent. We found that the ros1 mutant, which is defective in active DNA demethylation, showed an increased transgenerational epimutation rate. The ros1 mutation led to more spontaneously gained methylation than lost methylation at individual cytosines, compared to the wild type which had similar numbers of spontaneously gained and lost methylation cytosines. Consistently, transgenerational differentially methylated regions were also biased toward hypermethylation in the ros1 mutant. Our results reveal a genetic contribution of the ROS1 DNA demethylase to transgenerational epigenetic stability and suggest that ROS1 may have an unexpected surveillance function in preventing transgenerational DNA methylation increases.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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