The role of DNA content in shaping chromatin architecture and gene expression
Karina Montserrat González González

The role of DNA content in shaping chromatin architecture and gene expression

Artículo

Te invitamos a leer el artículo "The role of DNA content in shaping chromatin architecture and gene expression" publicado en The Plant Journal, ​a cargo del profesor investigador Dr. Luis Rafael Herrera Estrella y su equipo de trabajo de la UGA.

Autores:  Alfonso Carlos Barragán‐Rosillo / Ricardo A Chávez Montes / Luis Herrera-Estrella 

  1. Department of Plant and Soil Science

  2. Institute of Genomics for Crop Abiotic Stress Tolerance, Texas Tech University

  3. Lubbock, Texas, USA 

  4. Unidad de Genómica Avanzada (UGA) del Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados (Cinvestav) del Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Irapuato, Guanajuato, Mexico

Felicitamos al estudiantado y profesorado que contribuyeron en esta investigación por su arduo trabajo.

Summary:

Whole‐genome duplication is an evolutionary force that drives speciation in all living kingdoms and is notably prevalent in plants. The evolutionary history of plants involved at least two genomic duplications that significantly expanded the plant morphology and physiology spectrum. Many important crops are polyploids, showing valuable features relative to morphological and stress response traits. After genome duplication, diploidization processes facilitate genomic adjustments to restore disomic inheritance. However, little is known about the chromatin changes triggered by nuclear DNA content alterations. Here, we report that synthetically induced genome duplication leads to chromatinization and significant changes in gene expression, resulting in a transcriptional landscape resembling a natural tetraploid. Interestingly, synthetic diploidization elicits only minor alterations in transcriptional activity and chromatin accessibility compared to the more pronounced effects of tetraploidization. We identified epigenetic factors, including specific histone variants, that showed increased expression following genome duplication and decreased expression after genome reduction. These changes may play a key role in the epigenetic mechanisms underlying the phenotypic complexity after tetraploidization in plants. Our findings shed light on the mechanisms that modulate chromatin accessibility remodeling and gene transcription regulation underlying plant genome adaptation in response to changes in genome size.


Artículo anterior OsNLP3 and OsPHR2 orchestrate direct and mycorrhizal pathways for nitrate uptake by regulating NAR2.1–NRT2s complexes in rice
Siguiente artículo Doctorado en Ciencias en Ecología Humana
Print
317 Califica este artículo:
Sin calificación
Please login or register to post comments.
CONTÁCTENOS

Logo Cinvestav

Av. Instituto Politécnico Nacional 2508
Col. San Pedro Zacatenco, Alcaldía Gustavo A. Madero
Ciudad de México, C.P. 07360
Apartado Postal: 14-740, 07000 Ciudad de México

Tel. +52 (55) 5747 3800

Cinvestav © 2025
05/03/2025 12:40:47 p. m.