RNA has a 'memory cache' that can skip generations?

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Tzeentch
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RNA has a 'memory cache' that can skip generations?

Post by Tzeentch »

From tomorrow's Nature

Linky
Genome-wide non-mendelian inheritance of extra-genomic information in Arabidopsis

SUSAN J. LOLLE*, JENNIFER L. VICTOR, JESSICA M. YOUNG & ROBERT E. PRUITT*

Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Purdue University, 915 W. State Street, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907-2054, USA
* These authors contributed equally to this work

Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to R.E.P. (pruittr@purdue.edu).

A fundamental tenet of classical mendelian genetics is that allelic information is stably inherited from one generation to the next, resulting in predictable segregation patterns of differing alleles. Although several exceptions to this principle are known, all represent specialized cases that are mechanistically restricted to either a limited set of specific genes (for example mating type conversion in yeast) or specific types of alleles (for example alleles containing transposons or repeated sequences). Here we show that Arabidopsis plants homozygous for recessive mutant alleles of the organ fusion gene HOTHEAD (HTH) can inherit allele-specific DNA sequence information that was not present in the chromosomal genome of their parents but was present in previous generations. This previously undescribed process is shown to occur at all DNA sequence polymorphisms examined and therefore seems to be a general mechanism for extra-genomic inheritance of DNA sequence information. We postulate that these genetic restoration events are the result of a template-directed process that makes use of an ancestral RNA-sequence cache.
Apparently DNA has some sort of self-correcting mechanism, like a spell-checker, that can refer back to previous generations beyond that of parents. Wow.

Can someone who knows more biology than I do explain this a little more? Is this something worth getting excited about?
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Sokar
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Post by Sokar »

So far they have only found this in plants, not animals, so don't get to excited. It is quite a discovery and adds a new twist to the previously nigh on iron clad Mendelein system of inheritence.
BotM
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