Inheritance of a Phenotypically Neutral Epimutation Evokes Gene Silencing in Later Generations
Publication date
2019-05-02
Authors
Duempelmann, Lea
Mohn, Fabio
Shimada, Yukiko
Oberti, Daniele
Andriollo, Aude
Lochs, Silke
Bühler, Marc
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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cc_by_nc_nd
Abstract
Small RNAs trigger the formation of epialleles that are silenced across generations. Consequently, RNA-directed epimutagenesis is associated with persistent gene repression. Here, we demonstrate that small interfering RNA-induced epimutations in fission yeast are still inherited even when the silenced gene is reactivated, and descendants can reinstate the silencing phenotype that only occurred in their ancestors. This process is mediated by the deposition of a phenotypically neutral molecular mark composed of tri-methylated histone H3 lysine 9 (H3K9me3). Its stable propagation is coupled to RNAi and requires maximal binding affinity of the Clr4/Suvar39 chromodomain to H3K9me3. In wild-type cells, this mark has no visible impact on transcription but causes gene silencing if RNA polymerase-associated factor 1 complex (Paf1C)activity is impaired. In sum, our results reveal a distinct form of epigenetic memory in which cells acquire heritable, transcriptionally active epialleles that confer gene silencing upon modulation of Paf1C.
Keywords
epigenetic memory, H3K9me3, heterochromatin, Paf1C, phenotypic plasticity, RNA interference, RNAe, si3 mark, transcriptional gene silencing, transgenerational inheritance, Molecular Biology, Cell Biology
Citation
Duempelmann, L, Mohn, F, Shimada, Y, Oberti, D, Andriollo, A, Lochs, S & Bühler, M 2019, 'Inheritance of a Phenotypically Neutral Epimutation Evokes Gene Silencing in Later Generations', Molecular Cell, vol. 74, no. 3, pp. 534-541.e4. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2019.02.009