2015
DOI: 10.1105/tpc.114.133025
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Epigenetic Basis of Morphological Variation and Phenotypic Plasticity inArabidopsis thaliana

Abstract: Epigenetics is receiving growing attention in the plant science community. Epigenetic modifications are thought to play a particularly important role in fluctuating environments. It is hypothesized that epigenetics contributes to plant phenotypic plasticity because epigenetic modifications, in contrast to DNA sequence variation, are more likely to be reversible. The population of decrease in DNA methylation 1-2 (ddm1-2)-derived epigenetic recombinant inbred lines (epiRILs) in Arabidopsis thaliana is well suite… Show more

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Cited by 176 publications
(161 citation statements)
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“…Similar to the problem of missing heritability in human GWA studies, where individual variants cannot explain the phenotypic variation despite high heritabilities (Yang et al, 2010;Gibson, 2011;Makowsky et al, 2011), genetic variants cannot fully explain the high heritabilities in plant studies (Brachi et al, 2010;Sasaki et al, 2015). Several reasons, such as population structure (Filiault and Maloof, 2012), epistasis (Chan et al, 2011;Brachi et al, 2015;Kruijer, 2016), GxE (Sasaki et al, 2015), epigenetics (Johannes et al, 2009;Kooke et al, 2015), sample size (Korte and Farlow, 2013), heterogeneity (Atwell et al, 2010;Barboza et al, 2013), rare alleles (Salomé et al, 2011;Sanchez-Bermajo et al, 2015), and a high number of small-effect loci (Joseph et al, 2013;Verslues et al, 2014) can complicate the association between polymorphisms and phenotypes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Similar to the problem of missing heritability in human GWA studies, where individual variants cannot explain the phenotypic variation despite high heritabilities (Yang et al, 2010;Gibson, 2011;Makowsky et al, 2011), genetic variants cannot fully explain the high heritabilities in plant studies (Brachi et al, 2010;Sasaki et al, 2015). Several reasons, such as population structure (Filiault and Maloof, 2012), epistasis (Chan et al, 2011;Brachi et al, 2015;Kruijer, 2016), GxE (Sasaki et al, 2015), epigenetics (Johannes et al, 2009;Kooke et al, 2015), sample size (Korte and Farlow, 2013), heterogeneity (Atwell et al, 2010;Barboza et al, 2013), rare alleles (Salomé et al, 2011;Sanchez-Bermajo et al, 2015), and a high number of small-effect loci (Joseph et al, 2013;Verslues et al, 2014) can complicate the association between polymorphisms and phenotypes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Plant performance is directly determined by life history traits, such as flowering time and growth rate, which in turn depend on genetics, morphology, physiology, and the environment (Roff, 2007;Kooke et al, 2015). Understanding the regulation of plant growth and morphology is therefore essential for the comprehension of plant performance.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, epigenetic molecular phenomena are capable of altering the temporal, spatial, and abundance patterns of gene expression. These modifications may have morphological, physiological, and ecological consequences, and are heritable across generations (Kooke et al, 2015). The study of natural epigenetic variation is complicated due to the large contribution of DNA sequence variation compared to phenotypic variation within species.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4 Recent work in Arabidopsis shows that the phenotypic variation between epi-RILs, introduced by DNA-methylation differences, is highly heritable and differs between environments. 5 Epigenetic modifications might, therefore, serve as an important resource for adaptation to changing environments. 6 In support of the original paper 5 we summarize the major findings and reanalyzed the data for further clarification.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…5 Epigenetic modifications might, therefore, serve as an important resource for adaptation to changing environments. 6 In support of the original paper 5 we summarize the major findings and reanalyzed the data for further clarification. Specifically, we quantified the amount of observed variation in trait values in the epi-RIL population and estimated the partition of variation into epigenetic and other factors.…”
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confidence: 99%