Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Thieme M., Lanciano Sophie, Balzergue S., Daccord N., Mirouze Marie, Bucher E. (2017). Inhibition of RNA polymerase II allows controlled mobilisation of retrotransposons for plant breeding. Genome Biology, 18, 134 [10 p.]. ISSN 1474-760X.

Titre du document
Inhibition of RNA polymerase II allows controlled mobilisation of retrotransposons for plant breeding
Année de publication
2017
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000404985000002
Auteurs
Thieme M., Lanciano Sophie, Balzergue S., Daccord N., Mirouze Marie, Bucher E.
Source
Genome Biology, 2017, 18, 134 [10 p.] ISSN 1474-760X
Background: Retrotransposons play a central role in plant evolution and could be a powerful endogenous source of genetic and epigenetic variability for crop breeding. To ensure genome integrity several silencing mechanisms have evolved to repress retrotransposon mobility. Even though retrotransposons fully depend on transcriptional activity of the host RNA polymerase II (Pol II) for their mobility, it was so far unclear whether Pol II is directly involved in repressing their activity. Results: Here we show that plants defective in Pol II activity lose DNA methylation at repeat sequences and produce more extrachromosomal retrotransposon DNA upon stress in Arabidopsis and rice. We demonstrate that combined inhibition of both DNA methylation and Pol II activity leads to a strong stress-dependent mobilization of the heat responsive ONSEN retrotransposon in Arabidopsis seedlings. The progenies of these treated plants contain up to 75 new ONSEN insertions in their genome which are stably inherited over three generations of selfing. Repeated application of heat stress in progeny plants containing increased numbers of ONSEN copies does not result in increased activation of this transposon compared to control lines. Progenies with additional ONSEN copies show a broad panel of environment-dependent phenotypic diversity. Conclusions: We demonstrate that Pol II acts at the root of transposon silencing. This is important because it suggests that Pol II can regulate the speed of plant evolution by fine-tuning the amplitude of transposon mobility. Our findings show that it is now possible to study induced transposon bursts in plants and unlock their use to induce epigenetic and genetic diversity for crop breeding.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Sciences du monde végétal [076]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010070332]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010070332
Contact