Gene Inactivation in Transgenic Plants—A Unique Model for Studying Epigenetic Regulation of Gene Expression
Tatyana V. Marenkova, Alla A. Zagorskaya, Igor V. Deyneko, Elena V. Deineko

TL;DR
This paper reviews how transgene silencing in plants helps scientists understand how genes are regulated without changing DNA sequences.
Contribution
The paper provides a historical overview and synthesis of experimental findings on transgene silencing mechanisms in plants.
Findings
Transgene silencing occurs through transcriptional or post-transcriptional pathways mediated by siRNAs.
Both silencing pathways involve dsRNA processing by DCL enzymes and RISC complex formation.
Understanding these pathways allows targeted gene regulation in plants.
Abstract
The phenomenon of transgene silencing was first observed shortly after the generation of the initial transgenic plants. The vast body of experimental data accumulated since then constitutes an invaluable resource for dissecting the mechanisms of epigenetic gene regulation. Silencing operates at either the transcriptional (TGS) or post-transcriptional (PTGS) level and is predominantly mediated by small interfering RNAs (siRNAs). Although these two epigenetic pathways involve distinct sets of proteins and enzymes, they share fundamental mechanistic features: the generation of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), its processing into siRNAs by DICER-LIKE (DCL) enzymes, and the assembly of an Argonaute-centered effector ribonucleoprotein complex (RISC). Guided by sequence-specific siRNAs, this complex identifies complementary target sequences with high precision. A comprehensive understanding of…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant Molecular Biology Research · Plant Disease Management Techniques · Plant tissue culture and regeneration
