Abstract
Interactions between specific maize purple plant1 (pl1) alleles result in heritable changes of gene regulation that are manifested as differences in anthocyanin pigmentation. Transcriptionally repressed states of Pl1-Rhoades alleles (termed Pl9) are remarkably stable and invariably facilitate heritable changes of highly expressed states (termed Pl-Rh) in Pl9/Pl-Rh plants. However, Pl9 can revert to Pl-Rh when hemizygous, when heterozygous with pl1 alleles other than Pl1-Rhoades, or in the absence of trans-acting factors required to maintain repressed states. Cis-linked features of Pl1-Rhoades responsible for these trans-sensing behaviors remain unknown. Here, genetic tests of a pl1 allelic series identify two potentially separate cis-linked features: one facilitating repression of Pl-Rh and another stabilizing Pl9 in trans. Neither function is affected in ethyl-methanesulfonate-induced Pl1-Rhoades derivatives that produce truncated PL1 peptides, indicating that PL1 is unlikely to mediate trans interactions. Both functions, however, are impaired in a spontaneous Pl1-Rhoades derivative that fails to produce detectable pl1 RNA. Pl9-like states can also repress expression of a pl1-W22 allele, but this repression is not meiotically heritable. As the Pl9 state is not associated with unique small RNA species representing the pl1-coding region, the available data suggest that interactions between elements required for transcription underlie Pl1-Rhoades epigenetic behaviors. Copyright © 2007 by the Genetics Society of America.
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CITATION STYLE
Gross, S. M., & Hollick, J. B. (2007). Multiple trans-sensing interactions affect meiotically heritable epigenetic states at the maize pl1 locus. Genetics, 176(2), 829–839. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.107.072496
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