Experimental reconstruction of double‐stranded break repair‐mediated plastid <scp>DNA</scp> insertion into the tobacco nucleus — Dong Wang (2017) | RDL Network
Experimental reconstruction of double‐stranded break repair‐mediated plastid <scp>DNA</scp> insertion into the tobacco nucleus
Article 2017 en
Authors
DW
Dong Wang
JG
Jinbao Gu
RD
Rakesh David
Abstract
1 min read
Summary The mitochondria and plastids of eukaryotic cells evolved from endosymbiotic prokaryotes. DNA from the endosymbionts has bombarded nuclei since the ancestral prokaryotes were engulfed by a precursor of the nucleated eukaryotic host. An experimental confirmation regarding the molecular mechanisms responsible for organelle DNA incorporation into nuclei has not been performed until the present analysis. Here we introduced double‐stranded DNA breaks into the nuclear genome of tobacco through inducible expression of I‐ Sce I, and showed experimentally that tobacco chloroplast DNA s insert into nuclear genomes through double‐stranded DNA break repair. Microhomology‐mediated linking of disparate segments of chloroplast DNA occurs frequently during healing of induced nuclear double‐stranded breaks ( DSB ) but the resulting nuclear integrants are often immediately unstable. Non‐Mendelian inheritance of a selectable marker ( neo ), used to identify plastid DNA transfer, was observed in the progeny of about 50% of lines emerging from the screen. The instability of these de novo nu clear insertions of p las t id DNA ( nupt s) was shown to be associated with deletion not only of the nupt itself but also of flanking nuclear DNA within one generation of transfer. This deletion of pre‐existing nuclear DNA suggests that the genetic impact of organellar DNA transfer to the nucleus is potentially far greater than previously thought.
Jesús Espada, Esteban Ballestar, Mario F. Fraga, Ana Villar‐Garea, Ángeles Juarranz, Juan C. Stockert, Keith D. Robertson, François Fuks, Manel Esteller
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