The unusual predominance of maintenance DNA methylation in Spirodela polyrhiza

Author:

Harkess Alex1,Bewick Adam J2,Lu Zefu2,Fourounjian Paul3,Michael Todd P4,Schmitz Robert J2,Meyers Blake C15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Donald Danforth Plant Science Center , St Louis, MO 63132 , USA

2. Department of Genetics, University of Georgia , Athens, GA 30602 , USA

3. Waksman Institute of Microbiology, Rutgers University , New Brunswick, NJ 08901 , USA

4. Salk Institute for Biological Studies , La Jolla, CA 92037 , USA

5. Division of Plant Sciences, University of Missouri—Columbia , Columbia, MO 65211 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Duckweeds are among the fastest reproducing plants, able to clonally divide at exponential rates. However, the genetic and epigenetic impact of clonality on plant genomes is poorly understood. 5-methylcytosine (5mC) is a modified base often described as necessary for the proper regulation of certain genes and transposons and for the maintenance of genome integrity in plants. However, the extent of this dogma is limited by the current phylogenetic sampling of land plant species diversity. Here we analyzed DNA methylomes, small RNAs, mRNA-seq, and H3K9me2 histone modification for Spirodela polyrhiza. S. polyrhiza has lost highly conserved genes involved in de novo methylation of DNA at sites often associated with repetitive DNA, and within genes, however, symmetrical DNA methylation and heterochromatin are maintained during cell division at certain transposons and repeats. Consequently, small RNAs that normally guide methylation to silence repetitive DNA like retrotransposons are diminished. Despite the loss of a highly conserved methylation pathway, and the reduction of small RNAs that normally target repetitive DNA, transposons have not proliferated in the genome, perhaps due in part to the rapid, clonal growth lifestyle of duckweeds.

Funder

National Plant Genome Initiative Postdoctoral Fellowship

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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