Profiling of small RNAs in Arabidopsis ovules
Source: NCBI BioProject (ID PRJNA138735)
Source: NCBI BioProject (ID PRJNA138735)
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Project name: Arabidopsis thaliana
Description: We used profiling of Arabidopsis small RNA populations present in the mature ovules to define the potential genome targets of small RNAs during reproductive development. Defining the contributions and interactions of paternal and maternal genomes during embryo development is critical to understand the fundamental processes involved in hybrid vigor, hybrid sterility, and reproductive isolation. To determine the parental contributions and their regulation during Arabidopsis embryogenesis we combined deep-sequencing-based RNA profiling and genetic analyses. At the 2-4 cell stage there is a strong, genome-wide dominance of maternal transcripts, although transcripts are contributed by both parental genomes. At the globular stage the relative paternal contribution is higher, largely due to a gradual activation of the paternal genome. We identified two antagonistic maternal pathways that control these parental contributions. Paternal alleles are initially down-regulated by the chromatin siRNA pathway, linked to DNA and histone methylation, while transcriptional activation requires maternal activity of the histone chaperone complex CAF1. Our results define maternal epigenetic pathways controlling the parental contributions in plant embryos, which are distinct from those regulating genomic imprinting.Overall design: Profiling of small RNAs in wild type ovules of Arabidopsis
Data type: Transcriptome or Gene expression
Sample scope: Monoisolate
Relevance: ModelOrganism
Organization: Epigenetics and Seed Development Lab, IRD
Literatures
- PMID: 21620136
Release date: 2011-05-15
Last updated: 2011-04-14