Temporal and Spatial Downregulation of Arabidopsis MET1 Activity Results in Global DNA Hypomethylation and Developmental Defects

  • Kim, Minhee (Department of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University) ;
  • Ohr, Hyonhwa (Department of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University) ;
  • Lee, Jee Woong (Department of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University) ;
  • Hyun, Youbong (Department of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University) ;
  • Fischer, Robert L. (Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California at Berkeley) ;
  • Choi, Yeonhee (Department of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University)
  • Received : 2008.09.24
  • Accepted : 2008.09.29
  • Published : 2008.12.31

Abstract

DNA methylation is an epigenetic mechanism for gene silencing. In Arabidopsis, MET1 is the primary DNA methyltransferase that maintains CG DNA methylation. Plants having an overall reduction of MET1 activity, caused by a met1 mutation or a constitutively expressed MET1 antisense gene, display genome hypomethylation, inappropriate gene and transposon transcription, and developmental abnormalities. However, the effect of a transient reduction in MET1 activity caused by inhibiting MET1 expression in a restricted set of cells is not known. For this reason, we generated transgenic plants with a MET1 antisense gene fused to the DEMETER (DME) promoter (DME:MET1 a/s). Here we show that DME is expressed in leaf primordia, lateral root primoridia, in the region distal to the primary root apical meristem, which are regions that include proliferating cells. Endogenous MET1 expression was normal in organs where the DME:MET1 a/s was not expressed. Although DME promoter is active only in a small set of cells, these plants displayed global developmental abnormalities. Moreover, centromeric repeats were hypomethylated. The developmental defects were accumulated by the generations. Thus, not maintaining CG methylation in a small population of proliferating cells flanking the meristems causes global developmental and epigenetic abnormalities that cannot be rescued by restoring MET1 activity. These results suggest that during plant development there is little or no short-term molecular memory for reestablishing certain patterns of CG methylation that are maintained by MET1. Thus, continuous MET1 activity in dividing cells is essential for proper patterns of CG DNA methylation and development.

Keywords

Acknowledgement

Supported by : Korea Research Foundation, Korea Science and Engineering Foundation, National Institute of Health, United States Department of Agriculture

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