March 1, 2012
Journal Article

Functional Consequences of Subunit Diversity in RNA Polymerases II and V

Abstract

Multisubunit RNA polymerases IV and V (Pol IV and Pol V) evolved as specialized forms of Pol II that mediate RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) and transcriptional silencing of transposons, viruses, and endogenous repeats in plants. Among the subunits common to Arabidopsis thaliana Pols II, IV, and V are 93% identical alternative ninth subunits, NRP(B/D/E)9a and NRP(B/D/E)9b. The 9a and 9b subunit variants are incompletely redundant with respect to Pol II; whereas double mutants are embryo lethal, single mutants are viable, yet phenotypically distinct. Likewise, 9a or 9b can associate with Pols IV or V but RNA-directed DNA methylation is impaired only in 9b mutants. Based on genetic and molecular tests, we attribute the defect in RdDM to impaired Pol V function. Collectively, our results reveal a role for the ninth subunit in RNA silencing and demonstrate that subunit diversity generates functionally distinct subtypes of RNA polymerases II and V.

Revised: October 15, 2012 | Published: March 1, 2012

Citation

Tan E., T. Blevins, T.S. Ream, and C.S. Pikaard. 2012. Functional Consequences of Subunit Diversity in RNA Polymerases II and V. Cell Reports 1, no. 3:208-214. doi:10.1016/j.celrep.2012.01.004