Publication | Open Access
Environmental stress increases the entry of cytoplasmic organellar DNA into the nucleus in plants
91
Citations
36
References
2012
Year
Environmental StressGeneticsMolecular BiologyCytoplasmic Organellar DnaMolecular GeneticsPlant Molecular BiologyPlant StressAbiotic StressBiotic StressMitochondrial BiogenesisPlant CytologyGenome InstabilityMitochondrial DynamicDna ReplicationNuclear OrganizationBiologyChromatinNuclear GenomesMitochondrial Dna FragmentsNatural SciencesHeat StressMedicinePlant Physiology
Mitochondria and chloroplasts (photosynthetic members of the plastid family of cytoplasmic organelles) in eukaryotic cells originated more than a billion years ago when an ancestor of the nucleated cell engulfed two different prokaryotes in separate sequential events. Extant cytoplasmic organellar genomes contain very few genes compared with their candidate free-living ancestors, as most have functionally relocated to the nucleus. The first step in functional relocation involves the integration of inactive DNA fragments into nuclear chromosomes, and this process continues at high frequency with attendant genetic, genomic, and evolutionary consequences. Using two different transplastomic tobacco lines, we show that DNA migration from chloroplasts to the nucleus is markedly increased by mild heat stress. In addition, we show that insertion of mitochondrial DNA fragments during the repair of induced double-strand breaks is increased by heat stress. The experiments demonstrate that the nuclear influx of organellar DNA is a potentially a source of mutation for nuclear genomes that is highly susceptible to temperature fluctuations that are well within the range experienced naturally.
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