A Tunable Mechanism Determines the Transgenerational Duration of Small RNA Inheritance in C.elegans
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ABSTRACT: In C.elegans nematodes small RNAs enable transmission of epigenetic responses across multiple generations. While RNA interference (RNAi) inheritance mechanisms that enable “memorization” of ancestral responses are being elucidated, it is not known why or how, after a few generations, epigenetic effects are “forgotten”. We show that exposure to dsRNA activates a feedback loop that determines the duration of inherited silencing. We find that gene-specific RNAi responses dictate the transgenerational duration of RNAi responses mounted against unrelated genes, elicited separately in previous generations. RNA-seq analysis reveals that aside from silencing of genes with complementary sequences, dsRNA-induced RNAi affects the production of heritable endogenous small RNAs, which regulate the expression of RNAi factors. Manipulating genes in this feedback pathway changes the duration of heritable silencing. Active control of transgenerational effects could be adaptive, since ancestral responses would be detrimental if the environments of the progeny and the ancestors would differ.
ORGANISM(S): Caenorhabditis elegans
PROVIDER: GSE77654 | GEO | 2016/03/24
SECONDARY ACCESSION(S): PRJNA311152
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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