Epigenetics – The Molecular Tool in Understanding Abiotic Stress Response in Plants
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involve 2 molecules of each histone, i.e., H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 (Luger et
al., 1997; McGinty & Tan, 2015). Protruding unstructured N-terminal tail of
histone is exposed towards diverse post-transcriptional changes which include
methylation, acetylation, phosphorylation, ubiquitinylation, glycosylation,
ADP‐ribosylation, and sumoylation (Figure 12.2) (Sadakierska-Chudy &
Filip, 2015). By changing the interface among histones and the adjacent
DNA, as well as the interaction of other transcription factors to DNA, can
modify chromatin structure and gene transcription (Allis & Jenuwein, 2016;
Chang et al., 2020; Pikaard & Scheid, 2014). Methylation and acetylation
of histones have been well-described. They play diverse functions of plants,
i.e., evolution, development, and reproduction.
Histone acetylation and methylation are two epigenetic markers that are
now acknowledged as crucial and ubiquitous in gene regulation (Xu et al.,
2017). The enzymes involved in histone modifications are fascinating since
some operate as “writers” some are “erasers” while others act as “readers”
also known as “effector proteins.” Writer enzymes which include HATs,
methyltransferases, kinases, and ubiquitinates catalyze the attachment
of chemicals to the histone tail or core domain. On the other hand, eraser
enzymes which comprise deacetylases (HDACs), phosphatases, demethyl
ases (HDMs), as well as deubiquitinases remove those alterations caused by
writers (Figure 12.3). “Readers” proteins usually offer an exposed surface
(such as a crater or surface groove) for a changed histone residue and detect
the alteration (acetylation versus methylation) or even the specific state
(such as mono-, di- or tri-methylation of lysine). In order to discriminate
sequence context, readers contact the neighboring sequence of the changed
amino acid. Amidst methyl-lysine-binding motifs discovered in the “reader”
proteins are PHD, chromo, Tudor, PWWP, WD40, BAH, ADD, ankyrin
repeat, MBT, and zn-CW domains, which may distinguish desired methyl
lysines based on its methylation state and adjacent amino-acid sequence (Xu
et al., 2017). Histone acetylation imprints (particularly H3 and H4) improve
DNA accessibility by neutralizing the basic charge on histones, which
weakens histone and DNA methylation (Allis & Jenuwein, 2016; Onufriev
& Schiessel, 2019). In Arabidopsis, histone alterations – methylation have
both suppressive (symmetric H4R3me2, H3K9me2/3, and H3K27me3) as
well as operative (asymmetric H4R3me2, H3K4me3, and H3K36me2/3)
mark (Liu et al., 2010; Wang et al., 2016). Histone methylation, unlike
acetylation, preserves the electron charge of Lys and does not affect histone
proteins’ electrostatic properties. The occupancy or lack of methyl group
either on Lys or Arg, or both Lys and Arg amino acids on histones cause