Genetics just got a lot more complicated but also a lot more
exciting. It sounds as if it will become possible to even design
traits and cause them to happen. A long ways to go yet but I think
this will also make plant breeding much more efficient. At least
that is k the sense I am getting out of this story.
At this point the great controversy regarding Lamarckian genetics that played itself out eight decades ago look misplaced. The science was not good enough to produce much but it was surely led by the type of anomaly producing effects we are now working out.
Perhaps it is all a reminder that it is all about the data. Physics
has made great strides using a clearly Ptolemaic theory. Today
genetics is visibly sliding outside the old theoretical box which was
so nice and simple.
Researchers Find
Novel Way Plants Pass Traits to Next Generation
by Emily Caldwell for OSU News
Columbus OH (SPX) Apr 02, 2013
New research explains
how certain traits can pass down from one generation to the next -
at least in plants - without following the accepted rules of
genetics.
Scientists have shown
that an enzyme in corn responsible for reading information from DNA
can prompt unexpected changes in gene activity - an example of
epigenetics.
Epigenetics refers to
modifications in the genome that don't directly affect DNA sequences.
Though some evidence has suggested that epigenetic changes can bypass
DNA's influence to carry on from one generation to the next, this is
the first study to show that this epigenetic heritability can be
subject to selective breeding.
Researchers bred 10
generations of corn and found that one particular gene's activity
persisted from one generation to the next whether the enzyme was
functioning or not - meaning typical genetic behavior was not
required for the gene's trait to come through. And that, the
scientists determined, was because the enzyme targets a tiny piece of
DNA - previously thought of as "junk DNA" - that had jumped
from one area of the genome to another, giving that little
fragment power to unexpectedly turn on the gene.
The gene in question
affects pigmentation in the corn plant. As a result of these
experiments, the researchers were able to change yellow kernel corn
to a blue kernel variety by compromising the activity of the enzyme
in each male parent.
"This is the
first example where somebody has been able to take an epigenetic
source of variation and, through selective breeding, move it from an
inactive state to an active state," said Jay Hollick, associate
professor of molecular genetics at The Ohio State University and lead
author of the study. "The gene changes its expression in an epigenetic fashion and it doesn't follow standard inheritance behaviors. Those two factors alone have pretty profound implications not only for breeding but also for evolution."
The study appears
online in the journal The Plant Cell.
Plant breeders tend to
expect to generate desired traits according to what is known as
Mendelian principles of inheritance: Offspring receive one copy of
genes from each parental plant, and the characteristics of the
alleles, or alternative forms of genes, help predict which traits
will show up in the next plant generation.
However, epigenetic
variations that change the predictability of gene behavior have
complicated those expectations.
"The breeding community searches for novel traits that will have commercial interest and they really don't care what the basis is as long as they can capture it and breed it. Epigenetic heritability throws a kink in the expectations, but our findings also provide an opportunity - if they recognize the variation they're looking for is the result of epigenetics, they could use that to their advantage," said Hollick, also an investigator in Ohio State's centers for RNA Biology and Applied Plant Sciences.
"Just by
knowing that this allele behaves in this epigenetic fashion, I can
breed plants that either have full coloration or no coloration or
anything in between, because I am manipulating epigenetic variation
and not genetic variation. And color, of course, is only one trait
that could be affected."
With a longtime
specialization in the molecular basis for unexpected gene activity in
plants, Hollick had zeroed in on an enzyme called RNA polymerase IV
(Pol IV). Multiple types of RNA polymerases are responsible for
setting gene expression in motion in all cells, and Pol IV is an
enigmatic RNA polymerase that is known in plants to produce small RNA
molecules. Pol IV has puzzled scientists because despite its strong
conservation in all plants, it appears to have no discernible impact
on the development of Arabidopsis, a common model organism in plant
biology. For example, when it is deleted from these plants, they show
no signs of distress.
In corn, however, Hollick's lab had discovered previously that the absence of Pol IV creates clear problems in the plants, such as growing seeds in the tassel.
Hollick and colleagues observed that plants deficient in Pol IV also showed pigmentation in kernels of ears expected not to make any color at all - meaning they were expected to be yellow.
"Since we knew the misplaced tassel-seed trait was due to misexpression of a gene, we hypothesized that this pigment trait might be due to a pigment regulator being expressed in a tissue where it normally is never expressed. Molecular analysis showed that that was in fact the case," Hollick said.
The researchers
selected dark kernels and light kernels from multiple generations of
plants and crossed the plants derived form these different kernel
classes to create additional new generations of corn.
"We found that
the ears developed from those plants had even more darkly colored
kernels and fewer lightly colored kernels. We could segregate the
extreme types and cross them together and get this continued
intensification of the pigmentation over many generations," he
said. "We generated more progeny that had increasing amounts of
pigment. This is taking a gene that is genetically null, that doesn't
have any function in this part of the plant, and turning it from a
complete null to a completely dominant form that produces full
coloration.
"Essentially
we were breeding a novel trait, but not by selecting for any
particular gene. We were just continually altering the epigenetic
status of one of the two parental genomes every time."
This led the
scientists to question why the affected alleles of the pigmentation
gene would behave in this way. An investigation of the affected
alleles revealed the nearby presence of a transposon, or transposable
element: a tiny piece of DNA that has leapt from one area of the
genome to another.
Because the sequence of some small RNA fragments that come from Pol IV's activity are identical to the sequence of these transposons, the finding made sense to the scientists.
"Now that we know
that Pol IV is involved in regulating transposons, it's not
surprising that genes that are near transposons are now regulated by
Pol IV," Hollick said.
This work was supported by the National Research Initiative of the USDA Cooperative State. Research, Education and Extension Service and the National Science Foundation. Hollick conducted this work at the University of California, Berkeley, before he joined Ohio State's faculty. Co-authors are former Berkeley colleagues Karl Erhard Jr., Susan Parkinson, Stephen Gross, Joy-El Barbour and Jana Lim.
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