4.8 Article

piRNAs Initiate an Epigenetic Memory of Nonself RNA in the C. elegans Germline

Journal

CELL
Volume 150, Issue 1, Pages 65-77

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2012.06.015

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Funding

  1. Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award [GM099372]
  2. NIH [GM058800]

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Organisms employ a fascinating array of strategies to silence invasive nucleic acids such as transposons and viruses. Although evidence exists for several pathways that detect foreign sequences, including pathways that sense copy number, unpaired DNA, or aberrant RNA (e.g., dsRNA), in many cases, the mechanisms used to distinguish self from nonself nucleic acids remain mysterious. Here, we describe an RNA-induced epigenetic silencing pathway that permanently silences single-copy transgenes. We show that the Piwi Argonaute PRG-1 and its genomically encoded piRNA cofactors initiate permanent silencing, and maintenance depends on chromatin factors and the WAGO Argonaute pathway. Our findings support a model in which PRG-1 scans for foreign sequences and two other Argonaute pathways serve as epigenetic memories of self and nonself RNAs. These findings suggest how organisms can utilize RNAi-related mechanisms to detect foreign sequences not by any molecular signature, but by comparing the foreign sequence to a memory of previous gene expression.

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