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© 2005 American Society of Plant Biologists
A Toxic Mutator and Selection Alternative to the Non-Mendelian RNA Cache Hypothesis for hothead ReversionDepartment of Biology University of Washington Seattle, WA 98195
Department of Genetics University of Georgia Athens, GA 30605-7223 comai{at}u.washington.edu
Lolle and colleagues observed frequent true reversion of hothead (hth) mutations of Arabidopsis thaliana, whereby up to 10% of the progeny of self-pollinated homozygous hth/hth mutants carried a grandparental HTH allele (Lolle et al., 2005
HTH deficiency could result in accumulation of secondary metabolites that are toxic and mutagenic. The HTH gene encodes a product whose closest characterized relative is an MBC oxidoreductase that hydrolyzes the aromatic mandelonitrile in stone fruits (Zheng and Poulton, 1995
If an alternative genetic reservoir exists and it restores mutations to the previous genotype, it should be revised gradually so that its memory should fade with cell divisions. Yet, data that addresses the reversion rate are available in a previous article by the same group and are inconsistent with the above expectation (Lolle et al., 1998
Selection at multiple stages of development could bias the measured reversion rate. For example, several thousand pollen compete for 20 to 40 eggs. Rare HTH pollen could outcompete the preponderant hth pollen (containing the toxic metabolite), resulting in the enrichment of hth/HTH zygotes because the reversion rate was much higher for pollen than for eggs (Figure 1B). Our selection hypothesis appears inconsistent with the reported 3:1 progeny ratio from selfed heterozygotes because selection in favor of HTH pollen should decrease the fraction of hth/hth progeny, but HTH could have a paternal effect where an hth/HTH heterozygous anther provides its hth pollen with sufficient HTH enzyme to avoid a crisis. An hth/hth anther would provide no enzyme. Selection favoring revertant cells could also act in the shoot apical meristem, in the flower meristem, and in the anther primordia. In meristem tissues, selection could be influenced by the defective cellular surface properties of hth mutants that lead to postgenital organ fusion (Lolle et al., 1998
The precise reversion of hth mutations without the appearance of secondary mutations is consistent with a template-driven repair but also with the alternative hypothesis of mutagenesis and selection. As explained above, any significant mutation rate coupled to selection can yield frequent revertants, and the probability of finding secondary mutations at HTH revertant alleles is proportional to the mutation rate. In fact, the highest mutation rate compatible with survival is likely to be significantly lower than the rates that would generate frequent concurrent mutations on the HTH gene. We know from TILLING experiments the genomic consequences of moderately intense mutagenesis: in Arabidopsis, it produces an average of one mutation for every 170 kb (Greene et al., 2003
If mutagenesis is random, why are second site intragenic suppressors not found? Different proteins display different responses to selection for mutant reversion. With some proteins, precise reversion of deleterious mutations is the predominant response when strong selection for restoration of protein activities is applied (Rossiter et al., 1990
A seemingly compelling argument against selection is the appearance of revertants at presumably unselected polymorphic loci at the rate of 1 to 4%. This measured rate could be higher than the real per nucleotide reversion rate for two reasons. The genotype at these sites was scored by analyzing restriction endonuclease digests. Thus, multiple nucleotide mutations can change a cut site to a no-cut site. Changes from no-cut to cut must entail a true reversion. Since both were scored as equivalent changes, it is possible that changes of the first type were preponderant, and the true reversion rate per nucleotide could be lower than 1 to 4%. A second factor that could inflate the observed reversion rate is chimerism (Figure 1C). This possibility, resulting from somatic DNA changes, is acknowledged by the authors and supported by the higher rate of DNA changes measured in developing seeds (Lolle et al., 2005
Our mutator hypothesis may appear complicated, but it comports with the data. Aromatic glucosinolates are abundant in Arabidopsis seeds and flowers (Wittstock and Halkier, 2002
In conclusion, there are two components to this hypothesis for hth reversion: a mechanism that generates variation (pollen and seed of hth mutants are steeped in a self-made mutagen) and a mechanism that amplifies the variation (selection for rare reverted cells increases the observed number of reversion events). This and other explanations (Chaudhury, 2005 Acknowledgments We are thankful to several colleagues for comments and particularly to Arnold Bendich for encouragement and editorial suggestions. REFERENCES Brown, P.D., Tokuhisa, J.G., Reichelt, M., and Gershenzon, J. (2003). Variation of glucosinolate accumulation among different organs and developmental stages of Arabidopsis thaliana. Phytochemistry 62, 471481.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Canistro, D., Croce, C.D., Iori, R., Barillari, J., Bronzetti, G., Poi, G., Cini, M., Caltavuturo, L., Perocco, P., and Paolini, M. (2004). Genetic and metabolic effects of gluconasturtiin, a glucosinolate derived from cruciferae. Mutat. Res. 545, 2335.[Medline] Chaudhury, A. (2005). Hothead healer and extragenomic information. Nature 437, E1E2.[Medline]
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