Single-base methylome analysis reveals dynamic epigenomic differences associated with water deficit in apple

Publication Overview
TitleSingle-base methylome analysis reveals dynamic epigenomic differences associated with water deficit in apple
AuthorsXu J, Zhou S, Gong X, Song Y, van Nocker S, Ma F, Guan Q
TypeJournal Article
Journal NamePlant Biotechnology Journal
Volume16
Issue2
Year2017
Page(s)672-687
CitationXu J, Zhou S, Gong X, Song Y, van Nocker S, Ma F, Guan Q. Single-base methylome analysis reveals dynamic epigenomic differences associated with water deficit in apple. Plant Biotechnology Journal. 2017 Aug 10; 16(2):672-687.

Abstract

Cytosine methylation is an essential feature of epigenetic regulation and is involved in various biological processes. Although cytosine methylation has been analyzed at the genomic scale for several plant species, there is a general lack of understanding of the dynamics of global and genic DNA methylation in plants growing in environments challenged with biotic and abiotic stresses. In this study, we mapped cytosine methylation at single-base resolution in the genome of commercial apple (Malus x domestica), and analyzed changes in methylation patterns associated with water deficit in representative drought-sensitive and drought-tolerant cultivars. We found that the apple genome exhibits ~54%, ~38% and ~8.5% methylation at CG, CHG and CHH sequence contexts, respectively. We additionally documented changes in gene expression associated with water deficit in an attempt to link methylation and gene expression changes. Global methylation and transcription analysis revealed that promoter-unmethylated genes showed higher expression levels than promoter-methylated genes. Gene body methylation appears to be positively correlated with gene expression. Water deficit stress was associated with changes in methylation at a multitude of genes, including those encoding transcription factors (TFs) and transposable elements (TEs). These results present a methylome map of the apple genome and reveal widespread DNA methylation alterations in response to water deficit stress. These data will be helpful for understanding potential linkages between DNA methylation and gene expression in plants growing in natural environments and challenged with abiotic and biotic stresses. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.