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Nucleic Acids Research, 2001, Vol. 29, No. 6 1261-1271
© 2001 Oxford University Press

A link between DNA methylation and epigenetic silencing in transgenic Volvox carteri

Patrick Babinger, Iris Kobl, Wolfgang Mages and Rüdiger Schmitt*

Lehrstuhl für Genetik, Universität Regensburg, D-93040 Regensburg, Germany

Epigenetic silencing of foreign genes introduced into plants poses an unsolved problem for transgenic technology. Here we have used the simple multicellular green alga Volvox carteri as a model to analyse the relation of DNA methylation to transgenic silencing. Volvox DNA contains on average 1.1% 5-methylcytosine and 0.3% N6-methyladenine, as revealed by electrospray mass spectrometry and phosphoimaging of chromatographically separated 32P-labelled nucleotides. In two nuclear transformants of V.carteri, produced in 1993 by biolistic bombardment with a foreign arylsulphatase gene (C-ars), the transgene is still expressed in one (Hill 181), but not in the other (Hill 183), after an estimated 500–1000 generations. Each transformant clone contains multiple intact copies of C-ars, most of them integrated into the genome as tandem repeats. When the bisulphite genomic sequencing protocol was applied to examine two select regions of transgenic C-ars, we found that the inactivated copies (Hill 183) exhibited a high-level methylation (40%) of CpG dinucleotides, whereas the active copies (Hill 181) displayed low-level (7%) CpG methylation. These are average values from 40 PCR clones sequenced from each DNA strand in the two portions of C-ars. The observed correlation of CpG methylation and transgene inactivation in a green alga will be discussed in the light of transcriptional silencing.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +49 941 9433162; Fax: +49 941 9433163; Email: rudy.schmitt{at}biologie.uni-regensburg.de


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