DNA methyltransferases are required to induce heterochromatic re-replication in arabidopsis

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Abstract

The relationship between epigenetic marks on chromatin and the regulation of DNA replication is poorly understood. Mutations of the H3K27 methyltransferase genes, ARABIDOPSIS TRITHORAX-RELATED PROTEIN5 (ATXR5) and ATXR6, result in re-replication (repeated origin firing within the same cell cycle). Here we show that mutations that reduce DNA methylation act to suppress the re-replication phenotype of atxr5 atxr6 mutants. This suggests that DNA methylation, a mark enriched at the same heterochromatic regions that re-replicate in atxr5/6 mutants, is required for aberrant re-replication. In contrast, RNA sequencing analyses suggest that ATXR5/6 and DNA methylation cooperatively transcriptionally silence transposable elements (TEs). Hence our results suggest a complex relationship between ATXR5/6 and DNA methylation in the regulation of DNA replication and transcription of TEs. © 2012 Stroud et al.

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Stroud, H., Hale, C. J., Feng, S., Caro, E., Jacob, Y., Michaels, S. D., & Jacobsen, S. E. (2012). DNA methyltransferases are required to induce heterochromatic re-replication in arabidopsis. PLoS Genetics, 8(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002808

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