Catastrophic chromosomal restructuring during genome elimination in plants

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Authors

TAN Ek Han HENRY Isabelle M. RAVI Maruthachalam BRADNAM Keith R. MANDÁKOVÁ Terezie MURIMUTHU Mohan P. A. KORF Ian LYSÁK Martin COMAI Luca CHAN Simon W. L.

Year of publication 2015
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source eLife
MU Faculty or unit

Central European Institute of Technology

Citation
Web http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4461816/pdf/elife06516.pdf
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.06516
Field Biochemistry
Keywords Arabidopsis thaliana; Article; chromosome analysis; chromosome rearrangement; copy number variation
Attached files
Description Genome instability is associated with mitotic errors and cancer. This phenomenon can lead to deleterious rearrangements, but also genetic novelty, and many questions regarding its genesis, fate and evolutionary role remain unanswered. Here, we describe extreme chromosomal restructuring during genome elimination, a process resulting from hybridization of Arabidopsis plants expressing different centromere histones H3. Shattered chromosomes are formed from the genome of the haploid inducer, consistent with genomic catastrophes affecting a single, laggard chromosome compartmentalized within a micronucleus. Analysis of breakpoint junctions implicates breaks followed by repair through non-homologous joining (NHEJ) or stalled fork repair. Furthermore, mutation of required NHEJ factor DNA Ligase 4 results in enhanced haploid recovery. Lastly, heritability and stability of a rearranged chromosome suggest a potential for enduring genomic novelty. These findings provide a tractable, natural system towards investigating the causes and mechanisms of complex genomic rearrangements similar to those associated with several human disorders. © 2015, eLife Sciences Publications Ltd. All rights reserved.
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