Gene Expression Nebulas
A data portal of transcriptomic profiles analyzed by a unified pipeline across multiple species

Gene Expression Nebulas

A data portal of transcriptome profiles across multiple species

PRJNA253163: Mutation of a major CG methylase in rice causes genome-wide hypomethylation, dysregulated genome expression, and seedling lethality

Source: NCBI / SRP043448
Submission Date: -
Release Date: Jul 24 2014
Update Date: -

Summary: Cytosine methylation at CG sites (mCG) plays critical roles in development, epigenetic inheritance, and genome stability in mammals and plants. In the dicot model plant Arabidopsis thaliana, methyltransferase 1 (MET1), a principal CG methylase, functions to maintain mCG during DNA replication, with its null mutation resulting in global hypomethylation and pleiotropic developmental defects. Null mutation of a critical CG methylase has not been characterized at a whole-genome level in other higher eukaryotes, leaving the generality of the Arabidopsis findings largely speculative. Rice is a model plant of monocots, to which many of our important crops belong. Here we have characterized a null mutant of OsMet1-2, the major CG methylase in rice. We found that seeds homozygous for OsMet1-2 gene mutation (OsMET1-2-/-), which directly segregated from normal heterozygote plants (OsMET1-2+/-), were seriously maldeveloped, and all germinated seedlings underwent swift necrotic death. Compared with wild type, genome-wide loss of mCG occurred in the mutant methylome, which was accompanied by a plethora of quantitative molecular phenotypes including dysregulated expression of diverse protein-coding genes, activation and repression of transposable elements, and altered small RNA profiles. Our results have revealed conservation but also distinct functional differences in CG methylases between rice and Arabidopsis.

Overall Design: mRNA-seq of homozygote, heterozygote and WT

GEN Datasets:
GEND000290
Strategy:
Species:
Tissue:
Development Stage:
Protocol
Growth Protocol: The three genotypes of the OsMET1-2 gene in rice (cv. Nipponbare), wild-type (WT, +/+), heterozygote (+/-) and homozygous mutant (-/-) were germinated and grown on the hormone-free, half-strength Murashige & Skoog (MS) medium under 16/8 hrs light/dark at 26/24℃.
Treatment Protocol: -
Extract Protocol: Total RNA from the 11-d-old shoots of the three OsMET1-2 genotypes was isolated for RNA-seq.
Library Construction Protocol: For each genotype, two independent libraries were constructed and sequenced following the standard Illumina sequencing procedure on the HiSeq 2000.
Sequencing
Molecule Type: poly(A)+ RNA
Library Source:
Library Layout: PAIRED
Library Strand: -
Platform: ILLUMINA
Instrument Model: Illumina HiSeq 2000
Strand-Specific: Unspecific
Samples
Basic Information:
Sample Characteristic:
Biological Condition:
Experimental Variables:
Protocol:
Sequencing:
Assessing Quality:
Analysis:
Data Resource GEN Sample ID GEN Dataset ID Project ID BioProject ID Sample ID Sample Name BioSample ID Sample Accession Experiment Accession Release Date Submission Date Update Date Species Race Ethnicity Age Age Unit Gender Source Name Tissue Cell Type Cell Subtype Cell Line Disease Disease State Development Stage Mutation Phenotype Case Detail Control Detail Growth Protocol Treatment Protocol Extract Protocol Library Construction Protocol Molecule Type Library Layout Strand-Specific Library Strand Spike-In Strategy Platform Instrument Model Cell Number Reads Number Gbases AvgSpotLen1 AvgSpotLen2 Uniq Mapping Rate Multiple Mapping Rate Coverage Rate
Publications
Mutation of a major CG methylase in rice causes genome-wide hypomethylation, dysregulated genome expression, and seedling lethality.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America . 2014-07-07 [PMID: 25002488]