A hidden T-DNA-linked inversion-duplication causes a pronounced light-dependent phenotype in Arabidopsis
Martinez, M. d. P.; de Oliveira, J. A. V. S.; Nica, I.; Ditz, N.; Zheng, K.; Wewer, V.; Metzger, S.; Westhoff, P.; Eubel, H.; Finkemeier, I.; Schwarzlander, M.; Pucker, B.; Maurino, V. G.
Show abstract
T-DNA insertion mutants are widely used to disrupt genes and infer their functions, yet the insertions can also trigger unintended genomic changes that confound phenotypic interpretation. Here, we used T-DNA insertion mutants affecting the major mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (MDH1) and the heterodimeric NAD-dependent malic enzymes (ME1 and ME2) to examine their functional coordination across photoperiods and irradiance regimes. Under short days, especially at low light intensity, mdh1xme2 mutants were markedly smaller than wild type and, unexpectedly, than the mdh1xme1xme2 triple mutant, and they showed a more pronounced reduction in photosynthetic capacity. ME1 was undetectable in mdh1xme2, implying that the double and triple mutants effectively lack heterodimeric ME and should therefore behave similarly, contrary to what we observed. Whole-genome analysis resolved this discrepancy by revealing that the MDH1 T-DNA insertion in mdh1xme2 is accompanied by a major rearrangement, a 137-kbp duplication downstream of the insertion site, which was absent in the mdh1xme1xme2 triple mutant. This duplication increased gene dosage and elevated transcript abundance across the duplicated interval, while proteomics detected 5 of the 38 encoded proteins, including PEPC1. mdh1xme2 accumulated oxaloacetate-derived amino acids and displayed an altered carbon/nitrogen balance, making PEPC1 a plausible contributor to the exacerbated mdh1xme2 phenotype. Together, our data indicate that a T-DNA-linked structural variant can amplify expression of dozens of genes and intensify phenotypes at specific conditions, thereby affecting the interpretation of genotype-phenotype relationships. Because Agrobacterium-mediated DNA transfer also underpins many genome-editing workflows, our findings argue that structural validation around insertion/editing loci should be considered essential when interpreting T-DNA-derived plant lines.
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