Abstract

BackgroundCytosine methylation in plant genomes is important for the regulation of gene transcription and transposon activity. Genome-wide methylomes are studied upon mutation of the DNA methyltransferases, adaptation to environmental stresses or during development. However, from basic biology to breeding programs, there is a need to monitor multiple samples to determine transgenerational methylation inheritance or differential cytosine methylation. Methylome data obtained by sodium hydrogen sulfite (bisulfite)-conversion and next-generation sequencing (NGS) provide genome-wide information on cytosine methylation. However, a profiling method that detects cytosine methylation state dispersed over the genome would allow high-throughput analysis of multiple plant samples with distinct epigenetic signatures. We use specific restriction endonucleases to enrich for cytosine coverage in a bisulfite and NGS-based profiling method, which was compared to whole-genome bisulfite sequencing of the same plant material.MethodsWe established an effective methylome profiling method in plants, termed plant-reduced representation bisulfite sequencing (plant-RRBS), using optimized double restriction endonuclease digestion, fragment end repair, adapter ligation, followed by bisulfite conversion, PCR amplification and NGS. We report a performant laboratory protocol and a straightforward bioinformatics data analysis pipeline for plant-RRBS, applicable for any reference-sequenced plant species.ResultsAs a proof of concept, methylome profiling was performed using an Oryza sativa ssp. indica pure breeding line and a derived epigenetically altered line (epiline). Plant-RRBS detects methylation levels at tens of millions of cytosine positions deduced from bisulfite conversion in multiple samples. To evaluate the method, the coverage of cytosine positions, the intra-line similarity and the differential cytosine methylation levels between the pure breeding line and the epiline were determined. Plant-RRBS reproducibly covers commonly up to one fourth of the cytosine positions in the rice genome when using MspI-DpnII within a group of five biological replicates of a line. The method predominantly detects cytosine methylation in putative promoter regions and not-annotated regions in rice.ConclusionsPlant-RRBS offers high-throughput and broad, genome-dispersed methylation detection by effective read number generation obtained from reproducibly covered genome fractions using optimized endonuclease combinations, facilitating comparative analyses of multi-sample studies for cytosine methylation and transgenerational stability in experimental material and plant breeding populations.

Highlights

  • Cytosine methylation in plant genomes is important for the regulation of gene transcription and transposon activity

  • The LR2 epiline was derived from the control seed lot by three selfings combined with testing for cellular respiration (Additional file 1: Table S2) and energy use efficiency (EUE); the identification and stabilization upon selfing was comparable with the procedure followed in B. napus [22, 23, 25]

  • Restriction endonuclease combinations were selected with cytosine-containing cutting sites that potentially enrich for fragments from C/G-rich regions containing all cytosine contexts (CG, CHG and CHH), aiming to obtain broad coverage of cytosine methylation detection in the plant genome

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Summary

Introduction

Cytosine methylation in plant genomes is important for the regulation of gene transcription and transposon activity. DNA methylation at cytosines occurs in three sequence contexts, i.e. CG, CHG, CHH (H = A, T or C) [1,2,3], and is regulated by three pathways involving four DNA methyltransferases: the RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) pathway with domains rearranged DNA methylase 2 (DRM2), the chromomethylase 2 (CMT2) and CMT3 pathway and the maintenance methyltransferase 1 (MET1) pathway [4]. The RdDM pathway controls de novo DNA methylation via small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) binding specific DNA sequences and guiding DRM2 to initiate methylation of cytosines in all three sequence contexts [5]. The methyltransferases CMT2, CMT3, and DRM2 redundantly control non-CG methylation, and are components of selfreinforcing loop mechanisms, which include histone H3K9 methylation and siRNAs [7]. In addition to the activity of methyltransferases, the DNA methylation level is shaped by demethylation processes which can be passive by cell division dilution or active through DNA glycosylases [9]

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