Datos de la publicación: vol. 42 Issue: no. 14 Pages: 8970-8983
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gku619
Descripción: Funding Information: Swiss National Science Foundation [31003A 129957 to M.N.]; the European Research Council [‘EPIGENOME’ to M.N.]; the French National Research Agency [‘INFERNO’ to L.S.]; the European Cooperation in Science and Technology [Action BM1102 “Ciliates as model systems to study genome evolution, mechanisms of non-Mendelian inheritance and their roles in environmental adaptation”] and the CNRS-supported European Research Group “Paramecium Genome Dynamics and Evolution” [L.S.]. Cyril Denby Wilkes by a Ph.D. fellowship from the French Ministère de l’Enseignement Supérieur et de la Recherche. Conflict of interest statement. None declared.
Resumen: During the development of the somatic genome from the Paramecium germline genome the bulk of the copies of ∼45 000 unique, internal eliminated sequences (IESs) are deleted. IES targeting is facilitated by two small RNA (sRNA) classes: scnRNAs, which relay epigenetic information from the parental nucleus to the developing nucleus, and iesRNAs, which are produced and used in the developing nucleus. Why only certain IESs require sRNAs for their removal has been enigmatic. By analyzing the silencing effects of three genes:PGM (responsible for DNA excision), DCL2/3 (scnRNA production) and DCL5 (iesRNA production), we identify key properties required for IES elimination. Based on these results, we propose that, depending on the exact combination of their lengths and end bases, some IESs are less efficiently recognized or excised and have a greater requirement for targeting by scnRNAs and iesRNAs. We suggest that the variation in IES retention following silencing of DCL2/3 is not primarily due to scn-RNA density, which is comparatively uniform relative to IES retention, but rather the genetic properties of IESs. Taken together, our analyses demonstrate that in Paramecium the underlying genetic properties of developmentally deleted DNA sequences are essential in determining the sensitivity of these sequences to epigenetic control.