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Plant mobile domain proteins ensure Microrchidia 1 expression to fulfill transposon silencing.

Lucas JarryJulie DescombinMelody NicolauAnge DussutourNathalie PicaultGuillaume Moissiard
Published in: Life science alliance (2023)
Silencing of transposable elements (TEs) is an essential process to maintain genomic integrity within the cell. In Arabidopsis , together with canonical epigenetic pathways such as DNA methylation and modifications of histone tails, the plant mobile domain (PMD) proteins MAINTENANCE OF MERISTEMS (MAIN) and MAIN-LIKE 1 (MAIL1) are involved in TE silencing. In addition, the MICRORCHIDIA (MORC) ATPases, including MORC1, are important cellular factors repressing TEs. Here, we describe the genetic interaction and connection between the PMD and MORC pathways by showing that MORC1 expression is impaired in main and mail1 mutants. Transcriptomic analyses of higher order mutant plants combining pmd and morc1 mutations, and pmd mutants in which MORC1 expression is restored, show that the silencing defects of a subset of TEs in pmd mutants are most likely the consequence of MORC1 down-regulation. Besides, a significant fraction of up-regulated TEs in pmd mutants are not targeted by the MORC1 pathway.
Keyphrases
  • dna methylation
  • poor prognosis
  • gene expression
  • single cell
  • transcription factor
  • binding protein
  • cell therapy
  • cell wall