Abstract

During growth of multicellular organisms, identities of stem cells and differentiated cells need to be maintained. Cell fate is epigenetically controlled by the conserved Polycomb-group (Pc-G) proteins that repress their target genes by catalyzing histone H3 lysine 27 trimethylation (H3K27me3). Although H3K27me3 is associated with mitotically stable gene repression, a large fraction of H3K27me3 target genes are tissue-specifically activated during differentiation processes. However, in plants it is currently unclear whether H3K27me3 is already present in undifferentiated cells and dynamically regulated to permit tissue-specific gene repression or activation. We used whole-genome tiling arrays to identify the H3K27me3 target genes in undifferentiated cells of the shoot apical meristem and in differentiated leaf cells. Hundreds of genes gain or lose H3K27me3 upon differentiation, demonstrating dynamic regulation of an epigenetic modification in plants. H3K27me3 is correlated with gene repression, and its release preferentially results in tissue-specific gene activation, both during differentiation and in Pc-G mutants. We further reveal meristem- and leaf-specific targeting of individual gene families including known but also likely novel regulators of differentiation and stem cell regulation. Interestingly, H3K27me3 directly represses only specific transcription factor families, but indirectly activates others through H3K27me3-mediated silencing of microRNA genes. Furthermore, H3K27me3 targeting of genes involved in biosynthesis, transport, perception, and signal transduction of the phytohormone auxin demonstrates control of an entire signaling pathway. Based on these and previous analyses, we propose that H3K27me3 is one of the major determinants of tissue-specific expression patterns in plants, which restricts expression of its direct targets and promotes gene expression indirectly by repressing miRNA genes.

Highlights

  • Throughout their lifecycle, plants produce new organs through a group of undifferentiated cells which are maintained in structures called meristems

  • All organs and differentiated tissues in multicellular organisms are derived from undifferentiated pluripotent stem cells

  • Pc-G proteins are epigenetic regulators, they maintain stable expression states of their target genes through cell divisions that are not accompanied by changes in their DNA sequence

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Summary

Introduction

Throughout their lifecycle, plants produce new organs through a group of undifferentiated cells which are maintained in structures called meristems. These pluripotent cells continuously divide and, in the shoot, cells in the periphery of the apical meristem differentiate to give rise to lateral organs like leaves or flowers. Epigenetics has been revealed as fundamental mechanism to maintain cell and tissue identity and to regulate stem cells and cancer. Important epigenetic regulators of developmental processes are the Polycomb-group (Pc-G) and Trithorax-group (Trx-G) proteins which catalyze histone H3 lysine 27 trimethylation (H3K27me3) or H3K4me, respectively (reviewed in [2,3]). Pc-G target genes in plants and animals are covered by

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