Pliota, Pinelopi and Marvanova, Hana and Koreshova, Alevtina and Kaufman, Yotam and Tikanova, Polina and Krogull, Daniel and Hagmüller, Andreas and Widen, Sonya A. and Handler, Dominik and Gokcezade, Joseph and Duchek, Peter and Brennecke, Julius and Ben-David, Eyal and Burga, Alejandro (2024) Selfish conflict underlies RNA-mediated parent-of-origin effects. Nature. ISSN 0028-0836
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Abstract
Genomic imprinting—the non-equivalence of maternal and paternal genomes—is a critical process that has evolved independently in many plant and mammalian species According to kinship theory, imprinting is the inevitable consequence of conflictive selective forces acting on differentially expressed parental alleles Yet, how these epigenetic differences evolve in the first place is poorly understood. Here we report the identification and molecular dissection of a parent-of-origin effect on gene expression that might help to clarify this fundamental question. Toxin-antidote elements (TAs) are selfish elements that spread in populations by poisoning non-carrier individuals. In reciprocal crosses between two Caenorhabditis tropicalis wild isolates, we found that the slow-1/grow-1 TA is specifically inactive when paternally inherited. This parent-of-origin effect stems from transcriptional repression of the slow-1 toxin by the PIWI-interacting RNA (piRNA) host defence pathway. The repression requires PIWI Argonaute and SET-32 histone methyltransferase activities and is transgenerationally inherited via small RNAs. Remarkably, when slow-1/grow-1 is maternally inherited, slow-1 repression is halted by a translation-independent role of its maternal mRNA. That is, slow-1 transcripts loaded into eggs—but not SLOW-1 protein—are necessary and sufficient to counteract piRNA-mediated repression. Our findings show that parent-of-origin effects can evolve by co-option of the piRNA pathway and hinder the spread of selfish genes that require sex for their propagation.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | EP Archives > Multidisciplinary |
Depositing User: | Managing Editor |
Date Deposited: | 01 Apr 2024 06:50 |
Last Modified: | 01 Apr 2024 06:50 |
URI: | http://research.send4journal.com/id/eprint/3824 |