DNA methylation occurring in Cre-expressing cells inhibits loxP recombination and silences loxP-sandwiched genes.
Ruochen LiuQin LongXiuping ZouYou WangYan PeiPublished in: The New phytologist (2021)
The low DNA recombination efficiency of site-specific recombinase systems in plants limits their application; however, the underlying mechanism is unknown. We evaluate the gene deletion performance of four recombinase systems (Cre/loxP, Flp/FRT, KD/KDRT and B3/B3RT) in tobacco where the recombinases are under the control of germline-specific promoters. We find that the expression of these recombinases results mostly in gene silencing rather than gene deletion. Using the Cre/loxP system as a model, we reveal that the region flanked by loxP sites (floxed) is hypermethylated, which prevents floxed genes from deletion while silencing the expression of the genes. We further show CG methylation alone in the recombinase binding element of the loxP site is unable to impede gene deletion; instead, CHH methylation in the crossover region is required to inhibit loxP recombination. Our study illustrates the important role of recombinase-induced DNA methylation in the inhibition of site-specific DNA recombination and uncovers the mechanism underlying recombinase-associated gene silence in plants.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- copy number
- genome wide identification
- dna repair
- dna damage
- gene expression
- poor prognosis
- induced apoptosis
- circulating tumor
- transcription factor
- genome wide analysis
- binding protein
- randomized controlled trial
- clinical trial
- cell proliferation
- mouse model
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell cycle arrest
- dna binding
- circulating tumor cells