Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://223.31.159.10:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/333
Title: Roles, and establishment, maintenance and erasing of the epigenetic cytosine methylation marks in plants
Authors: Kumar, Sushil
Kumari, Renu
Sharma, Vishakha
Sharma, Vinay
Keywords: cytosine methylation
DNA methylation mechanisms
DNA demethylation mechanisms
Darwinian-cum-Lamarckian evolution
epialleles
epigenetic modifications
genetic recombination
heritable induced defence
mutational hotspots
transgenerational inheritance
Issue Date: 2013
Publisher: Indian Academy of Sciences
Citation: J. Genet. 92(3): 629-666
Abstract: Heritable information in plants consists of genomic information in DNA sequence and epigenetic information superimposed on DNA sequence. The latter is in the form of cytosine methylation at CG, CHG and CHH elements (where H = A, T orC) and a variety of histone modifications in nucleosomes. The epialleles arising from cytosine methylation marks on the nuclear genomic loci have better heritability than the epiallelic variation due to chromatin marks. Phenotypic variation is increased manifold by epiallele comprised methylomes. Plants (angiosperms) have highly conserved genetic mechanisms to establish, maintain or erase cytosine methylation from epialleles. The methylation marks in plants fluctuate according to the cell/tissue/organ in the vegetative and reproductive phases of plant life cycle. They also change according to environment. Epialleles arise by gain or loss of cytosine methylation marks on genes. The changes occur due to the imperfection of the processes that establish and maintain the marks and on account of spontaneous and stress imposed removal of marks. Cytosine methylation pattern acquired in response to abiotic or biotic stress is often inherited over one to several subsequent generations.Cytosine methylation marks affect physiological functions of plants via their effect(s) on gene expression levels. They also repress transposable elements that are abundantly present in plant genomes. The density of their distribution along chromosome lengths affects meiotic recombination rate, while their removal increases mutation rate. Transposon activation due to loss of methylation causes rearrangements such that new gene regulatory networks arise and genes for microRNAs may originate. Cytosine methylation dynamics contribute to evolutionary changes. This review presents and discusses the available evidence on origin, removal and roles of cytosine methylation and on related processes, such as RNA directed DNA methylation, imprinting, paramutation and transgenerational memory in plants.
Description: Accepted date: 14 May 2013
URI: http://172.16.0.77:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/333
ISSN: 0973-7731
Appears in Collections:Institutional Publications

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