AI Article Synopsis

  • Seed development is influenced by the balance of maternal and paternal genomes, with excess paternal genomes often leading to seed abortion due to abnormal endosperm growth.
  • The RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) pathway in the paternal parent is critical for the viability of seeds resulting from these excess paternal genomic crosses.
  • Changes in gene expression and DNA methylation patterns were observed in endosperms from both viable and lethal crosses, suggesting that seed abortion may involve complex regulatory mechanisms rather than simply the behavior of transposable elements or gene misregulation.

Article Abstract

Seed development is sensitive to parental dosage, with excess maternal or paternal genomes creating reciprocal phenotypes. Paternal genomic excess frequently results in extensive endosperm proliferation without cellularization and seed abortion. We previously showed that loss of the RNA polymerase IV gene (NRPD1) in tetraploid fathers represses seed abortion in paternal excess crosses. Here, we show genetically that RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) pathway activity in the paternal parent is sufficient to determine the viability of paternal excess Arabidopsis () seeds. We compared transcriptomes, DNA methylation, and small RNAs from the endosperm of seeds from balanced crosses (diploid × diploid) and lethal (diploid × tetraploid) and viable paternal excess crosses (diploid × tetraploid ). Endosperms from both lethal and viable paternal excess seeds share widespread transcriptional and DNA methylation changes at genes and transposable elements. Interploidy seed abortion is thus unlikely to be caused by transposable elements or imprinted gene misregulation, and its repression by the loss of paternal RdDM is associated with only modest gene expression changes. Finally, using allele-specific transcription data, we present evidence for a transcriptional buffering system that increases the expression of maternal alleles and represses paternal alleles in response to excess paternal genomic dosage. These findings prompt reconsideration of models for dosage sensitivity in endosperm.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6635864PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1105/tpc.19.00047DOI Listing

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