Abstract
A silencing signal in plants with an RNA specificity determinant moves through plasmodesmata and the phloem. To identify the mobile RNA, we grafted Arabidopsis thaliana shoots to roots that would be a recipient for the silencing signal. Using mutants that block small RNA (sRNA) biogenesis in either source or recipient tissue, we found that transgene-derived sRNA as well as a substantial proportion of the endogenous sRNA had moved across the graft union, and we provide evidence that 24-nucleotide mobile sRNAs direct epigenetic modifications in the genome of the recipient cells. Mobile sRNA thus represents a mechanism for transmitting the specification of epigenetic modification and could affect genome defense and responses to external stimuli that have persistent effects in plants.
Publication types
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Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
MeSH terms
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Arabidopsis / cytology
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Arabidopsis / genetics*
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Arabidopsis / metabolism
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Arabidopsis Proteins / genetics
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Arabidopsis Proteins / metabolism
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DNA Methylation
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DNA Transposable Elements
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DNA, Plant / genetics
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DNA, Plant / metabolism
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Epigenesis, Genetic*
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Genes, Plant
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Genome, Plant
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MicroRNAs / genetics
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MicroRNAs / metabolism*
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Plant Roots / cytology
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Plant Roots / genetics
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Plant Roots / metabolism
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Plant Shoots / cytology
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Plant Shoots / genetics
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Plant Shoots / metabolism
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Plants, Genetically Modified
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RNA Interference*
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RNA, Plant / genetics
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RNA, Plant / metabolism*
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RNA, Small Interfering / genetics
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RNA, Small Interfering / metabolism*
Substances
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Arabidopsis Proteins
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DNA Transposable Elements
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DNA, Plant
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MicroRNAs
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RNA, Plant
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RNA, Small Interfering