4.4 Article

Transmission Dynamics of Heritable Silencing Induced by Double-Stranded RNA in Caenorhabditis elegans

Journal

GENETICS
Volume 180, Issue 3, Pages 1275-1288

Publisher

GENETICS
DOI: 10.1534/genetics.108.089433

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01GM37706, R01HD37933, 2T32GM007231]

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Heritable silencing effects are gene suppression phenomena that can persist for generations after induction. In the majority of RNAi experiments conducted in Caenorhabditis elegans, the silencing response results in a hypomorphic phenotype where the effects recede after the F-1 generation. F-2 and subsequent generations revert to the original phenotype. Specific examples of transgenerational RNAi in which effects persist to the F-2 generation and beyond have been described. In this study, we describe a systematic pedigree-based analysis of heritable silencing processes resulting from initiation of interference targeted at the C. elegans oocyte maturation factor oma-1. Heritable silencing of oma-1 is a dose-dependent process where the inheritance of the silencing factor is unequally distributed among the population. Heritability is not constant over generational time, with silenced populations appearing to undergo a bottleneck three to four generations following microinjection of RNA. Transmission of silencing through these generations can be through either maternal or paternal gamete lines and is surprisingly more effective through the male gametic line. Genetic linkage tests reveal that silencing in the early generations is transmitted independently of the original targeted locus, in a manner indicative of a diffusible epigenetic element.

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