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ID 116539
Author
Liaw, YengMun Kobe University
Liu, Yikun Kobe University
Teo, CheeHow Universiti Malaya
Cápal, Petr Centre of the Region Hana for Biotechnological and Agricultural Research
Fukui, Kiichi Osaka University
Doležel, Jaroslav Centre of the Region Hana for Biotechnological and Agricultural Research
Ohmido, Nobuko Kobe University
Keywords
Arabidopsis genome
DNA methylation
epigenome
human–plant hybrid cell line
gene expression
whole-genome bisulfite sequencing (WGBS)
Content Type
Journal Article
Description
Methylation systems have been conserved during the divergence of plants and animals, although they are regulated by different pathways and enzymes. However, studies on the interactions of the epigenomes among evolutionarily distant organisms are lacking. To address this, we studied the epigenetic modification and gene expression of plant chromosome fragments (~30 Mb) in a human–Arabidopsis hybrid cell line. The whole-genome bisulfite sequencing results demonstrated that recombinant Arabidopsis DNA could retain its plant CG methylation levels even without functional plant methyltransferases, indicating that plant DNA methylation states can be maintained even in a different genomic background. The differential methylation analysis showed that the Arabidopsis DNA was undermethylated in the centromeric region and repetitive elements. Several Arabidopsis genes were still expressed, whereas the expression patterns were not related to the gene function. We concluded that the plant DNA did not maintain the original plant epigenomic landscapes and was under the control of the human genome. This study showed how two diverging genomes can coexist and provided insights into epigenetic modifications and their impact on the regulation of gene expressions between plant and animal genomes.
Journal Title
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
ISSN
14220067
Publisher
MDPI
Volume
22
Issue
11
Start Page
5426
Published Date
2021-05-21
Rights
This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
EDB ID
DOI (Published Version)
URL ( Publisher's Version )
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language
eng
TextVersion
Publisher
departments
Bioscience and Bioindustry