The Initiation of Epigenetic Silencing of Active Transposable Elements Is Triggered by RDR6
2013
Transposable elements (TEs) are mobile fragments of DNA that are repressed in both plant and animal genomes through the epigenetic inheritance of repressed chromatin and expression states. The epigenetic silencing of TEs in plants is mediated by a process of RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM). Two pathways of RdDM have been identified: RNA Polymerase IV (Pol IV)-RdDM, which has been shown to be responsible for the de novo initiation, corrective reestablishment, and epigenetic maintenance of TE and/or transgene silencing; and RNA-dependent RNA Polymerase6 (RDR6)-RdDM, which was recently identified as necessary for maintaining repression for a few TEs. We have further characterized RDR6-RdDM using a genomewide search to identify TEs that generate RDR6-dependent small interfering RNAs. We have determined that TEs only produce RDR6-dependent small interfering RNAs when transcriptionally active, and we have experimentally identified two TE subfamilies as direct targets of RDR6-RdDM. We used these TEs to test the function of RDR6-RdDM in assays for the de novo initiation, corrective reestablishment, and maintenance of TE silencing. We found that RDR6-RdDM plays no role in maintaining TE silencing. Rather, we found that RDR6 and Pol IV are two independent entry points into RdDM and epigenetic silencing that perform distinct functions in the silencing of TEs: Pol IV-RdDM functions to maintain TE silencing and to initiate silencing in an RNA Polymerase II expression-independent manner, while RDR6-RdDM functions to recognize active Polymerase II-derived TE mRNA transcripts to both trigger and correctively reestablish TE methylation and epigenetic silencing. Transposable elements (TEs) constitute large percentages of both animal and plant genomes. TEs are major targets of multiple endogenous gene-silencing pathways that act to limit their expression and ability to generate new insertions and mutations (for review, see Girard and Hannon, 2008). To study TE silencing, the process has been divided into three distinct mechanisms: the de novo initiation/triggering of silencing, the corrective reestablishment of silencing of TEs that were recently transcriptionally reactivated, and the epigenetic maintenance of TE silencing. In the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) genome,
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
51
References
2
Citations
NaN
KQI