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Regenerant arabidopsis lineages display a distinct genome-wide spectrum of mutations conferring variant phenotypes

Abstract:
Multicellular organisms can be regenerated from totipotent differentiated somatic cell or nuclear founders [1-3]. Organisms regenerated from clonally related isogenic founders might a priori have been expected to be phenotypically invariant. However, clonal regenerant animals display variant phenotypes caused by defective epigenetic reprogramming of gene expression [2], and clonal regenerant plants exhibit poorly understood heritable phenotypic ("somaclonal") variation [4-7]. Here we show that somaclonal variation in regenerant Arabidopsis lineages is associated with genome-wide elevation in DNA sequence mutation rate. We also show that regenerant mutations comprise a distinctive molecular spectrum of base substitutions, insertions, and deletions that probably results from decreased DNA repair fidelity. Finally, we show that while regenerant base substitutions are a likely major genetic cause of the somaclonal variation of regenerant Arabidopsis lineages, transposon movement is unlikely to contribute substantially to that variation. We conclude that the phenotypic variation of regenerant plants, unlike that of regenerant animals, is substantially due to DNA sequence mutation. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Publisher copy:
10.1016/j.cub.2011.07.002

Authors

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Department:
Oxford
Role:
Author


Journal:
Current Biology More from this journal
Volume:
21
Issue:
16
Pages:
1385-1390
Publication date:
2011-08-23
DOI:
ISSN:
0960-9822


Language:
English
Pubs id:
pubs:179531
UUID:
uuid:f4f01505-f851-4b2d-a343-cb967191dba1
Local pid:
pubs:179531
Source identifiers:
179531
Deposit date:
2012-12-19
ARK identifier:

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