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Researchers Identify Novel Mechanism Maintaining DNA Methylation and Genome Stability

Sep 02, 2021

Researchers at the Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology, Center for Excellence in Molecular Plant Sciences of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, have uncovered a novel mechanism that maintains DNA methylation and genome stability in plants. This study was published in PNAS.
In both mammals and plants, the cytosine bases of the DNA in the genome can be modified by the addition of a methyl group, which is referred to as DNA methylation. The core function of DNA methylation is to silence transposable elements (TEs) integrated in the genome which when active can jump to new genomic locations, generating mutations and life-threatening genome instability.
In plants, different DNA methylation pathways cooperatively maintain the DNA methylation status of TEs and ensure that TEs remain in a silenced state after cell division. Previous findings have led to the general acceptance of a “static” model for the maintenance of DNA methylation, where methylation at a given TE in the genome is maintained by one particular pathway.
For example, methylation in the CHH context at the body of long TEs is regulated by the DNA methyltransferase CMT2, whereas the RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) pathway maintains CHH methylation at the edges of long and short TEs.
In this study, the researchers found that hundreds of genomic loci regulated by CMT2 are converted to RdDM-regulated loci in a ddm1 mutant background, lacking a functional DDM1 chromatin remodeler.
Besides, they showed that blocking this CMT2-to-RdDM switch leads to the reactivation of TEs and a burst of TE transposition, suggesting that this pathway conversion is essential to ensure the maintenance of TEs in a repressed state and therefore to protect genome stability.
This study identifies a novel variant of the RdDM pathway, and demonstrates that DNA methylation maintenance at a given site is a dynamic and adaptable process, indicating the existence and importance of double-insurance mechanisms for DNA methylation regulation in plants to guarantee genome integrity.
Contact

ZHU Jiankang

Center for Excellence in Molecular Plant Sciences

E-mail:

Pathway conversion enables a double-lock mechanism to maintain DNA methylation and genome stability

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