Abstract

DNA methylation plays important roles in the regulation of gene expression and maintenance of genome stability in many organisms, including plants. In this study, we treated rice with gamma rays (GRs) and DNA methyltransferase inhibitors (DNMTis) to induce variations in DNA methylation and evaluated epigenetic diversity using methylation-sensitive amplified polymorphism (MSAP) and transposon methylation display (TMD) marker systems. Comparative and integrated analyses of the data revealed that both GRs and DNMTis alone have epimutagenic effects and that combined treatment enhanced these effects. Calculation of methylation rates based on band scoring suggested that both GRs and DNMTis induce epigenetic diversity by demethylation in a dose-dependent manner, and combined treatment can induce variations more synergistically. The difference in the changes in full and hemi-methylation rates between MSAP and TMD is presumed to be caused by the different genomic contexts of the loci amplified in the two marker systems. Principal coordinate, phylogenic, and population structure analyses commonly yielded two clusters of individuals divided by DNMTi treatment. The clustering pattern was more apparent in TMD, indicating that DNMTis have a stronger effect on hypermethylated repetitive regions. These findings provide a foundation for understanding epigenetic variations induced by GRs and DNMTis and for epigenetic mutation breeding.

Highlights

  • DNA methylation contributes to the epigenetic regulation of gene expression, genomic stability, and transposon silencing and plays important roles in multiple biological processes, including plant and mammalian development [1,2]

  • Evaluation of Polymorphisms Detected by methylation-sensitive amplified polymorphism (MSAP) and transposon methylation display (TMD) Marker Systems

  • We found that epigenetic variations were induced by gamma rays (GRs), DNA methyltransferase inhibitors (DNMTis), and their combination in rice plants based on MSAP and TMD analyses

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Summary

Introduction

DNA methylation contributes to the epigenetic regulation of gene expression, genomic stability, and transposon silencing and plays important roles in multiple biological processes, including plant and mammalian development [1,2]. Plants 2020, 9, 1088 effects of DNA methylation loss in plants [7,8]. AZA and ZEB have similar inhibitory effects on DNA methylation, ZEB has a longer half-life and better stability than AZA [8,9]. Many studies have investigated the effects of DNMTis on gene expression and the silencing, growth, development, and induction of DNA damage in plants [10,11,12,13]

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