Abstract
The arms race between parasitic sequences and their hosts is
a major driving force for evolution of gene control systems. Since transposable
elements (TEs) are potentially deleterious, eukaryotes silence them by
epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation. Little is known about how TEs
counteract silencing to propagate during evolution. Here, we report behavior of
sequence-specific anti-silencing proteins used by Arabidopsis TEs and evolution
of those proteins and their target sequences. We show that VANC, a TE-encoded
anti-silencing protein, induces extensive DNA methylation loss throughout TEs.
Related VANC proteins have evolved to hypomethylate TEs of completely different
spectra. Targets for VANC proteins often form tandem repeats, which vary
considerably between related TEs. We propose that evolution of VANC proteins
and their targets allow propagation of TEs while causing minimal host damage.
Our findings provide insight into the evolutionary dynamics of these apparently
“selfish” sequences. They also provide potential tools to edit epigenomes in a
sequence-specific manner.
Hosaka, A., Saito, R., Takashima, K. et al. Evolution ofsequence-specific anti-silencing systems in Arabidopsis . Nat Commun 8, 2161
(2017) doi:10.1038/s41467-017-02150-7
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