Publication | Open Access
Reprogramming of the Activity of the Activator/Dissociation Transposon Family during Plant Regeneration in Rice
27
Citations
18
References
2002
Year
Plant GeneticsEngineeringGeneticsActivator/dissociation Transposon FamilyEpigenetic PhenomenaEpigeneticsPlant Molecular BiologyMethylation PatternsCyclic ActivityGene ExpressionCell BiologyPlant HormoneBiologyChromatinDevelopmental BiologyGenetic EngineeringSynthetic Plant BiologyPlant RegenerationMedicinePlant Physiology
Many aspects of epigenetic phenomena have been elucidated via studies of transposable elements. An active transposable element frequently loses its ability to mobilize and goes into an inactive state during development. In this study, we describe the cyclic activity of a maize transposable element dissociation (Ds) in rice. In rice genome, Ds undergoes the spontaneous loss of mobility. However, an inactive state of Ds can be changed into an active state during tissue culture. The recovery of mobility accompanies not only changes in the methylation patterns of the terminal region of Ds, but also alteration in the steady state level of the activator (Ac) mRNA that is expressed by a constitutive CaMV 35S promoter. Furthermore, the Ds-reactivation process is not random, but stage-specific during plantlet regeneration. Our findings have expanded previous observations on Ac reactivation in the tissue culture of maize.
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