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2022 Articolo in rivista open access

Multi-omics data integration provides insights into the post-harvest biology of a long shelf-life tomato landrace

In this study we investigated the transcriptome and epigenome dynamics of the tomato fruit during post-harvest in a landracebelonging to a group of tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum L.) collectively known as "Piennolo del Vesuvio", all characterized by a long shelflife. Expression of protein-coding genes and microRNAs as well as DNA methylation patterns and histone modifications were analysedin distinct post-harvest phases. Multi-omics data integration contributed to the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms underlyingprocesses leading to long shelf-life. We unveiled global changes in transcriptome and epigenome. DNA methylation increased and therepressive histone mark H3K27me3 was lost as the fruit progressed from red ripe to 150 days post-harvest. Thousands of genes weredifferentially expressed, about half of which were potentially epi-regulated as they were engaged in at least one epi-mark change inaddition to being microRNA targets in ~5% of cases. Down-regulation of the ripening regulator MADS-RIN and of genes involved inethylene response and cell wall degradation was consistent with the delayed fruit softening. Large-scale epigenome reprogrammingthat occurred in the fruit during post-harvest likely contributed to delayed fruit senescence.

Tomato epigenetics post-harvest multi-omics
2017 Articolo in rivista metadata only access

ICF-specific DNMT3B dysfunction interferes with intragenic regulation of mRNA transcription and alternative splicing.

Gatto Sole ; Gagliardi Miriam ; Franzese Monica ; Leppert Sylwia ; Papa Mariarosaria ; Cammisa Marco ; Grillo Giacomo ; Velasco Guillame ; Francastel Claire ; Toubiana Shir ; D'Esposito Maurizio ; Angelini Claudia ; Matarazzo Maria R

Hypomorphic mutations in DNA-methyltransferase DNMT3B cause majority of the rare disorder Immunodeficiency, Centromere instability and Facial anomalies syndrome cases (ICF1). By unspecified mechanisms, mutant-DNMT3B interferes with lymphoid-specific pathways resulting in immune response defects. Interestingly, recent findings report that DNMT3B shapes intragenic CpG-methylation of highly-transcribed genes. However, how the DNMT3B-dependent epigenetic network modulates transcription and whether ICF1-specific mutations impair this process remains unknown. We performed a transcriptomic and epigenomic study in patient-derived B-cell lines to investigate the genome-scale effects of DNMT3B dysfunction. We highlighted that altered intragenic CpG-methylation impairs multiple aspects of transcriptional regulation, like alternative TSS usage, antisense transcription and exon splicing. These defects preferentially associate with changes of intragenic H3K4me3 and at lesser extent of H3K27me3 and H3K36me3. In addition, we highlighted a novel DNMT3B activity in modulating the self-regulatory circuit of sense-antisense pairs and the exon skipping during alternative splicing, through interacting with RNA molecules. Strikingly, altered transcription affects disease relevant genes, as for instance the memory-B cell marker CD27 and PTPRC genes, providing us with biological insights into the ICF1-syndrome pathogenesis. Our genome-scale approach sheds light on the mechanisms still poorly understood of the intragenic function of DNMT3B and DNA methylation in gene expression regulation.

RNA-seq ChIP-seq