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Dive into the research topics where Jay B. Hollick is active.

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Featured researches published by Jay B. Hollick.


The Plant Cell | 2000

mediator of paramutation1 Is Required for Establishment and Maintenance of Paramutation at Multiple Maize Loci

Jane E. Dorweiler; Charles C. Carey; Kenneth M. Kubo; Jay B. Hollick; Jerry L. Kermicle; Vicki L. Chandler

Paramutation is the directed, heritable alteration of the expression of one allele when heterozygous with another allele. Here, the isolation and characterization of a mutation affecting paramutation, mediator of paramutation1-1 (mop1-1), are described. Experiments demonstrate that the wild-type gene Mop1 is required for establishment and maintenance of the paramutant state. The mop1-1 mutation affects paramutation at the multiple loci tested but has no effect on alleles that do not participate in paramutation. The mutation does not alter the amounts of actin and ubiquitin transcripts, which suggests that the mop1 gene does not encode a global repressor. Maize plants homozygous for mop1-1 can have pleiotropic developmental defects, suggesting that mop1-1 may affect more genes than just the known paramutant ones. The mop1-1 mutation does not alter the extent of DNA methylation in rDNA and centromeric repeats. The observation that mop1 affects paramutation at multiple loci, despite major differences between these loci in their gene structure, correlations with DNA methylation, and stability of the paramutant state, suggests that a common mechanism underlies paramutation. A protein-based epigenetic model for paramutation is discussed.


Trends in Genetics | 1997

Paramutation and related allelic interactions

Jay B. Hollick; Jane E. Dorweiler; Vicki L. Chandler

Paramutation is an allelic interaction that results in meiotically heritable changes in gene expression. Until recently, the few documented cases in higher plants seemed unusual and rare. This perception is rapidly fading because of the discovery of related examples and the growing recognition of epigenetic changes in a wide variety of biological systems.


Science | 2009

RNA Polymerase IV Functions in Paramutation in Zea mays

Karl F. Erhard; Jennifer L. Stonaker; Susan E. Parkinson; Jana P. Lim; Christopher J. Hale; Jay B. Hollick

Plants have distinct RNA polymerase complexes (Pol IV and Pol V) with largely unknown roles in maintaining small RNA–associated gene silencing. Curiously, the eudicot Arabidopsis thaliana is not affected when either function is lost. By use of mutation selection and positional cloning, we showed that the largest subunit of the presumed maize Pol IV is involved in paramutation, an inherited epigenetic change facilitated by an interaction between two alleles, as well as normal maize development. Bioinformatics analyses and nuclear run-on transcription assays indicate that Pol IV does not engage in the efficient RNA synthesis typical of the three major eukaryotic DNA-dependent RNA polymerases. These results indicate that Pol IV employs abnormal RNA polymerase activities to achieve genome-wide silencing and that its absence affects both maize development and heritable epigenetic changes.


PLOS Biology | 2007

A Novel Snf2 Protein Maintains trans-Generational Regulatory States Established by Paramutation in Maize

Christopher J. Hale; Jennifer L. Stonaker; Stephen M. Gross; Jay B. Hollick

Paramutations represent heritable epigenetic alterations that cause departures from Mendelian inheritance. While the mechanism responsible is largely unknown, recent results in both mouse and maize suggest paramutations are correlated with RNA molecules capable of affecting changes in gene expression patterns. In maize, multiple required to maintain repression (rmr) loci stabilize these paramutant states. Here we show rmr1 encodes a novel Snf2 protein that affects both small RNA accumulation and cytosine methylation of a proximal transposon fragment at the Pl1-Rhoades allele. However, these cytosine methylation differences do not define the various epigenetic states associated with paramutations. Pedigree analyses also show RMR1 does not mediate the allelic interactions that typically establish paramutations. Strikingly, our mutant analyses show that Pl1-Rhoades RNA transcript levels are altered independently of transcription rates, implicating a post-transcriptional level of RMR1 action. These results suggest the RNA component of maize paramutation maintains small heterochromatic-like domains that can affect, via the activity of a Snf2 protein, the stability of nascent transcripts from adjacent genes by way of a cotranscriptional repression process. These findings highlight a mechanism by which alleles of endogenous loci can acquire novel expression patterns that are meiotically transmissible.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

Diversity of Pol IV Function Is Defined by Mutations at the Maize rmr7 Locus

Jennifer L. Stonaker; Jana P. Lim; Karl F. Erhard; Jay B. Hollick

Mutations affecting the heritable maintenance of epigenetic states in maize identify multiple small RNA biogenesis factors including NRPD1, the largest subunit of the presumed maize Pol IV holoenzyme. Here we show that mutations defining the required to maintain repression7 locus identify a second RNA polymerase subunit related to Arabidopsis NRPD2a, the sole second largest subunit shared between Arabidopsis Pol IV and Pol V. A phylogenetic analysis shows that, in contrast to representative eudicots, grasses have retained duplicate loci capable of producing functional NRPD2-like proteins, which is indicative of increased RNA polymerase diversity in grasses relative to eudicots. Together with comparisons of rmr7 mutant plant phenotypes and their effects on the maintenance of epigenetic states with parallel analyses of NRPD1 defects, our results imply that maize utilizes multiple functional NRPD2-like proteins. Despite the observation that RMR7/NRPD2, like NRPD1, is required for the accumulation of most siRNAs, our data indicate that different Pol IV isoforms play distinct roles in the maintenance of meiotically-heritable epigenetic information in the grasses.


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2011

Paramutation: a process for acquiring trans-generational regulatory states.

Karl F. Erhard; Jay B. Hollick

Basic tenets of Mendelian inheritance are violated by paramutations in which trans-homolog interactions lead to heritable changes in gene regulation and phenotype. First described in plants, similar behaviors have now been noted in diverse eukaryotes. Genetic and molecular studies of paramutations occurring in maize indicate that components of a small interfering RNA (siRNA) biogenesis pathway are required for the maintenance of meiotically heritable regulatory states. Although these findings lead to a hypothesis that siRNAs themselves mediate paramutation interactions, an assessment of existing data supports the opinion that siRNAs alone are insufficient. Recent evidence implies that transcription of paramutation-associated repeats and siRNA-facilitated chromatin changes at affected loci are involved in directing and maintaining the heritable changes in gene regulation that typify paramutations.


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2012

Paramutation: a trans-homolog interaction affecting heritable gene regulation

Jay B. Hollick

Paramutation describes both the process and results of trans-sensing between chromosomes that causes specific heritable changes in gene regulation. RNA molecules are implicated in mediating similar events in maize, mouse, and Drosophila. Changes in both small RNA profiles and cytosine methylation patterns in Arabidopsis hybrids represent a potential molecular equivalent to the interactions responsible for paramutations. Despite a seemingly unifying feature of RNA-directed changes, both recent and historical works show that paramutations in maize require plant-specific proteins and lack expected hallmarks of a trans-effect mediated solely by RNAs. Recent examples of nearby transposons affecting RNA polymerase II functions lead to an opinion that paramutations represent an emergent property of the transcriptional dynamics ongoing in plant genomes between repetitious features and nearby genes.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

Production and Processing of siRNA Precursor Transcripts from the Highly Repetitive Maize Genome

Christopher J. Hale; Karl F. Erhard; Damon Lisch; Jay B. Hollick

Mutations affecting the maintenance of heritable epigenetic states in maize identify multiple RNA–directed DNA methylation (RdDM) factors including RMR1, a novel member of a plant-specific clade of Snf2-related proteins. Here we show that RMR1 is necessary for the accumulation of a majority of 24 nt small RNAs, including those derived from Long-Terminal Repeat (LTR) retrotransposons, the most common repetitive feature in the maize genome. A genetic analysis of DNA transposon repression indicates that RMR1 acts upstream of the RNA–dependent RNA polymerase, RDR2 (MOP1). Surprisingly, we show that non-polyadenylated transcripts from a sampling of LTR retrotransposons are lost in both rmr1 and rdr2 mutants. In contrast, plants deficient for RNA Polymerase IV (Pol IV) function show an increase in polyadenylated LTR RNA transcripts. These findings support a model in which Pol IV functions independently of the small RNA accumulation facilitated by RMR1 and RDR2 and support that a loss of Pol IV leads to RNA Polymerase II–based transcription. Additionally, the lack of changes in general genome homeostasis in rmr1 mutants, despite the global loss of 24 nt small RNAs, challenges the perceived roles of siRNAs in maintaining functional heterochromatin in the genomes of outcrossing grass species.


Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology | 2010

Paramutation and Development

Jay B. Hollick

Paramutation describes a heritable change of gene expression that is brought about through interactions between homologous chromosomes. Genetic analyses in plants and, more recently, in mouse indicate that genomic sequences related to transcriptional control and molecules related to small RNA biology are necessary for specific examples of paramutation. Some of the molecules identified in maize are also required for normal plant development. These observations indicate a functional relationship between the nuclear mechanisms responsible for paramutation and modes of developmental gene control.


Plant Physiology | 1995

Transgenic Analysis of a Hybrid Poplar Wound-Inducible Promoter Reveals Developmental Patterns of Expression Similar to That of Storage Protein Genes

Jay B. Hollick; Milton P. Gordon

The wound-inducible win3 multigene family from hybrid poplars (Populus trichocarpa x Populus deltoides) encodes proteins with structural similarities with Kunitz-type protease inhibitors (H.D. Bradshaw Jr., J.B. Hollick, T.J. Parsons, H.R.G. Clarke, M.P. Gordon [1990] Plant Mol Biol 14: 51–59), and at least one member, win3.12, is transcribed de novo in the injured and uninjured leaves of wounded trees (J.B. Hollick, M.P. Gordon [1993] Plant Mol Biol 22: 561–572). A previous study demonstrated that 1352 bp of 5[prime] flanking DNA from the win3.12 gene confers local wound-regulated expression of the [beta]-glucuronidase gene in transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv Xanthi n.c.) (J.B. Hollick, M.P. Gordon [1993] Plant Mol Biol 22: 561–572). We extend this transgenic analysis here by examining the developmental regulation and systemic wound induction conferred by the same transgene construct in tobacco. Biochemical and histochemical surveys of [beta]-glucuronidase activity are described for four, independent transgenic lines. The observed spatial and temporal expression patterns coincide with dormant storage tissues and with previously described expression patterns for both seed and vegetative storage protein genes. Developmental northern blot analysis of win3 RNA levels in poplar seeds confirms that proper temporal expression of the reporter gene is maintained during tobacco seed maturation. These results demonstrate that a putative Kunitz-type protease inhibitor can be wound inducible in addition to being expressed in developing seeds.

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Karl F. Erhard

University of California

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Jana P. Lim

University of California

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Jerry L. Kermicle

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Damon Lisch

University of California

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