Abstract

DNA methylation is an ancient molecular modification found in most eukaryotes. In plants, DNA methylation is not only critical for transcriptionally silencing transposons, but can also affect phenotype by altering expression of protein coding genes. The extent of its contribution to phenotypic diversity over evolutionary time is, however, unclear, because of limited stability of epialleles that are not linked to DNA mutations. To dissect the relative contribution of DNA methylation to transposon surveillance and host gene regulation, we leveraged information from three species in the Brassicaceae that vary in genome architecture, Capsella rubella, Arabidopsis lyrata, and Arabidopsis thaliana. We found that the lineage-specific expansion and contraction of transposon and repeat sequences is the main driver of interspecific differences in DNA methylation. The most heavily methylated portions of the genome are thus not conserved at the sequence level. Outside of repeat-associated methylation, there is a surprising degree of conservation in methylation at single nucleotides located in gene bodies. Finally, dynamic DNA methylation is affected more by tissue type than by environmental differences in all species, but these responses are not conserved. The majority of DNA methylation variation between species resides in hypervariable genomic regions, and thus, in the context of macroevolution, is of limited phenotypic consequence.

Highlights

  • Cytosine methylation is a heritable epigenetic modification found in the genomes of organisms spanning the eukaryotic phylogeny [1,2,3,4]

  • DNA methylation can vary between tissues and environments [18,19,20], and in a handful of cases changes in methylation state contribute to heritable phenotypic variation, the majority have been linked to structural differences near the affected genes [21,22,23,24,25,26,27]

  • DNA methylation is an epigenetic mark that has received a great deal of attention in plants because it can be stably transmitted across generations

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Summary

Introduction

Cytosine methylation is a heritable epigenetic modification found in the genomes of organisms spanning the eukaryotic phylogeny [1,2,3,4]. DNA methylation can vary between tissues and environments [18,19,20], and in a handful of cases changes in methylation state contribute to heritable phenotypic variation, the majority have been linked to structural differences near the affected genes [21,22,23,24,25,26,27]. These observations suggest that DNA methylation may regulate developmental processes and that it could potentiate phenotypic variation during evolution

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