4.6 Article

Lifetime genealogical divergence within plants leads to epigenetic mosaicism in the shrub Lavandula latifolia (Lamiaceae)

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 231, Issue 5, Pages 2065-2076

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.17257

Keywords

DNA methylation; epigenetic mosaicism; genealogical signal; high‐ performance liquid chromatography; Lavandula latifolia (wild lavender); methylation‐ sensitive amplified fragment‐ length polymorphism (MS‐ AFLP); subindividual variation

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad, Spanish Government [CGL2016-76605-P]
  2. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion, Spanish Government [PID2019-104365GB-I00]
  3. Consejeria de Transformacion Economica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades, Andalusian Government [P18-FR-4413]

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This study on Lavandula latifolia (Lamiaceae) shrubs revealed the presence of epigenetic heterogeneity within plants, which was shown to be a result of internal epigenetic diversification occurring steadily during individual development and subsequently propagated by branch divisions. This highlights that epigenetic mosaicism is a continuous process within plants.
Epigenetic mosaicism is a possible source of within-plant phenotypic heterogeneity, yet its frequency and developmental origin remain unexplored. This study examines whether extant epigenetic heterogeneity within Lavandula latifolia (Lamiaceae) shrubs reflects recent epigenetic modifications experienced independently by different plant parts or, alternatively, it is the cumulative outcome of a steady lifetime process. Leaf samples from different architectural modules (branch tips) were collected from three L. latifolia plants and characterized epigenetically by global DNA cytosine methylation and methylation state of methylation-sensitive amplified fragment-length polymorphism (MS-AFLP) markers. Epigenetic characteristics of modules were then assembled with information on the branching history of plants. Methods borrowed from phylogenetic research were used to assess genealogical signal of extant epigenetic variation and reconstruct within-plant genealogical trajectory of epigenetic traits. Plants were epigenetically heterogeneous, as shown by differences among modules in global DNA methylation and variation in the methylation states of 6 to 8% of MS-AFLP markers. All epigenetic features exhibited significant genealogical signal within plants. Events of epigenetic divergence occurred throughout the lifespan of individuals and were subsequently propagated by branch divisions. Internal epigenetic diversification of L. latifolia individuals took place steadily during their development, a process which eventually led to persistent epigenetic mosaicism.

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