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RNAi-dependent Polycomb repression controls transposable elements in Tetrahymena.

Xiaolu ZhaoJie XiongFengbiao MaoYalan ShengXiao ChenLifang FengWen DuiWentao YangAurélie KapustaCédric FeschotteRobert S CoyneWei MiaoShan GaoYifan Liu
Published in: Genes & development (2019)
RNAi and Polycomb repression play evolutionarily conserved and often coordinated roles in transcriptional silencing. Here, we show that, in the protozoan Tetrahymena thermophila, germline-specific internally eliminated sequences (IESs)-many related to transposable elements (TEs)-become transcriptionally activated in mutants deficient in the RNAi-dependent Polycomb repression pathway. Germline TE mobilization also dramatically increases in these mutants. The transition from noncoding RNA (ncRNA) to mRNA production accompanies transcriptional activation of TE-related sequences and vice versa for transcriptional silencing. The balance between ncRNA and mRNA production is potentially affected by cotranscriptional processing as well as RNAi and Polycomb repression. We posit that interplay between RNAi and Polycomb repression is a widely conserved phenomenon, whose ancestral role is epigenetic silencing of TEs.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • gene expression
  • dna repair
  • dna methylation
  • heat shock
  • binding protein
  • wild type
  • dna damage