4.8 Article

A mutation that prevents paramutation in maize also reverses Mutator transposon methylation and silencing

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NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.052152199

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Both paramutation and Mutator (Mu) transposon inactivation involve heritable changes in gene expression without concomitant changes in DNA sequence. The mechanisms by which these shifts in gene activity are achieved are unknown. Here we present evidence that these two phenomena are linked mechanistically. We show that mutation of a gene, modifier of paramutation 1 (mop1), which prevents paramutation at three different loci in maize, can reverse methylation of Mutator elements reliably. In mop1 mutant backgrounds, methylation of nonautonomous Mu elements can be reversed even in the absence of the regulatory MuDR element. Previously silenced MuDR elements are reactivated sporadically after multiple generations of exposure to mop1 mutations. MuDR methylation is separable from MuDR silencing, because removal of methylation does not cause immediate reactivation. The mop1 mutation does not alter the methylation of certain other transposable elements including those just upstream of a paramutable b1 gene. Our results suggest that the mop1 gene acts on a subset of epigenetically regulated sequences in the maize genome and paramutation and Mu element methylation require a common factor, which we hypothesize influences chromatin structure.

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