Regulation of Active DNA Demethylation by an α-Crystallin Domain Protein in Arabidopsis
Article 2014 en
Authors
WQ
Weiqiang Qian
DM
Daisuke Miki
ML
Mingguang Lei
Abstract
1 min read
Highlights•IDM2 is an α-crystallin domain protein•IDM2 prevents DNA hypermethylation and is a cellular antisilencing factor•IDM2 interacts with and partially colocalizes with IDM1•IDM2 is required for the full activity of IDM1 in vivoSummaryDNA methylation patterns are dynamically controlled by DNA methylation and active DNA demethylation, but the mechanisms of regulation of active DNA demethylation are not well understood. Through forward genetic screens for Arabidopsis mutants showing DNA hypermethylation at specific loci and increased silencing of reporter genes, we identified IDM2 (increased DNA methylation 2) as a regulator of DNA demethylation and gene silencing. IDM2 dysfunction causes DNA hypermethylation and silencing of reporter genes and some endogenous genes. These effects of idm2 mutations are similar to those of mutations in IDM1, a regulator of active DNA demethylation. IDM2 encodes an α-crystallin domain protein in the nucleus. IDM2 and IDM1 interact physically and partially colocalize at discrete subnuclear foci. IDM2 is required for the full activity of H3K18 acetylation but not H3K23 acetylation of IDM1 in planta. Our results suggest that IDM2 functions in active DNA demethylation and in antisilencing by regulating IDM1.Graphical abstract
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