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Taylor and Francis Group, Plant Signaling & Behavior, 5(7), p. 595-597

DOI: 10.4161/psb.19871

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Nuclear genome diversity in somatic cells is accelerated by environmental stress

Journal article published in 2012 by Dong Wang, Andrew H. Lloyd ORCID, Jeremy N. Timmis
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

DNA transfer to the nucleus from prokaryotic ancestors of the cytoplasmic organelles (mitochondria and plastids) has occurred during endosymbiotic evolution in eukaryotes. In most eukaryotes, organelle DNA transfer to nucleus is a continuing process. The frequency of DNA transposition from plastid (chloroplast) to nucleus has been measured in tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum) experimentally. We have monitored the effects of environmental stress on the rate of DNA transfer from plastid to nucleus by exploiting nucleus-specific reporter genes in two transplastomic tobacco lines. DNA migration from plastids to the nucleus is markedly increased by mild heat stress. In addition, insertions of mitochondrial DNA into induced double-strand breaks are observed after heat treatment. These results show that movement of organelle DNA to the nucleus is remarkably increased by heat stress. ; Dong Wang, Andrew H. Lloyd and Jeremy N. Timmis