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Researchers: Cross-species gene regulation observed for the first time

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Dodder parasitizing a host plant/ Penn State U

From ScienceDaily:

Dodder, a parasitic plant that causes major damage to crops in the US and worldwide every year, can silence the expression of genes in the host plants from which it obtains water and nutrients. This cross-species gene regulation, which includes genes that contribute to the host plant’s defense against parasites, has never before been seen from a parasitic plant.

“Dodder is an obligate parasite, meaning that it can’t live on its own,” said Michael J. Axtell, professor of biology at Penn State and an author of the paper. “Unlike most plants that get energy through photosynthesis, dodder siphons off water and nutrients from other plants by connecting itself to the host vascular system using structures called haustoria. We were able to show that, in addition to the nutrients that flow into dodder from the host plant across the haustoria, dodder passes microRNAs into its host plant that regulate the expression of host genes in a very direct way.”

MicroRNAs are very short bits of nucleic acid — the material of DNA and RNA — that can bind to messenger RNAs that code for protein. This binding of microRNA to messenger RNA prevents the protein from being made, either by blocking the process directly or by triggering other proteins that cut the messenger RNA into smaller pieces. Importantly, the small remnants of the messenger RNA can then function like additional microRNAs, binding to other copies of the messenger RNA, causing further gene silencing.

“Dodder seems to turn on the expression of these microRNAs when it comes into contact with the host plant,” said James H. Westwood, professor of plant pathology, physiology, and weed science at Virginia Tech and another author of the paper. “What was really interesting is that the microRNAs specifically target host genes that are involved in the plant’s defense against the parasite.”Paper. (paywall) – Saima Shahid, Gunjune Kim, Nathan R. Johnson, Eric Wafula, Feng Wang, Ceyda Coruh, Vivian Bernal-Galeano, Tamia Phifer, Claude W. dePamphilis, James H. Westwood, Michael J. Axtell. MicroRNAs from the parasitic plant Cuscuta campestris target host messenger RNAs. Nature, 2018; 553 (7686): 82 DOI: 10.1038/nature25027 More.

From the release: “What was really interesting is that the microRNAs specifically target host genes that are involved in the plant’s defense against the parasite.” No! Surely not! Dodder weed cannot have been explicitly targeting the host plants’ defences against… dodder weed?! That’s almost like there is more to evolution than Darwinism. Watch yer mouth!

Genetics is not remotely like what we thought it was. Neither is the world of life, probably.

See also: There’s a gene for that… or is there?

Comments
No! Surely not! Dodder weed cannot have been explicitly targeting the host plants’ defences against… dodder weed?! That’s almost like there is more to evolution than Darwinism.
How are these two clauses connected?mullers_ratchet
January 16, 2018
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Yes, JSmith, let's compare: 1) With the example in the OP the parasite is the weed that changes the gene expression of its host so that it can survive 2) In your example the parasite gets munched along with its host whose genes were incorrectly expressed. Anyone who is not on an agenda can see the difference.ET
January 16, 2018
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ET at 2: You write, "The weed turns off the genes in another plant that would fight off the weed. It’s as if the weed knows what to do so it can survive." Indeed. That's the point. Natural selection acting on random mutations supposedly causes dodder weed, after a very very long series of failures to now know exactly what to do. I don't think so.News
January 16, 2018
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Dodder changes the gene expression in its host so it can survive. The moronic parasite you are talking about gets munched along with its host.
Let's compare: 1) The plant parasite changes the gene expression in its host so it can survive. 2) The animal parasite changes the gene expression of its host so that it can survive. Yup, I concede to your infinite wisdom. These are completely different and not similar at all.JSmith
January 16, 2018
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I told you, JSmith just doesn't get it:
The animal parasite changes the gene expression of the primary host which results in a change in its behaviour making it more susceptible to predation by the secondary host.
Is the animal parasite also the predator? No. Dodder changes the gene expression in its host so it can survive. The moronic parasite you are talking about gets munched along with its host.ET
January 16, 2018
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JSmith doesn’t get it. The weed turns off the genes in another plant that would fight off the weed. It’s as if the weed knows what to do so it can survive.
Since you asked so nicely. The animal parasite changes the gene expression of the primary host which results in a change in its behaviour making it more susceptible to predation by the secondary host. How is this different? They are both altering the expression of genes in another species. I find this very interesting.JSmith
January 16, 2018
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JSmith doesn't get it. The weed turns off the genes in another plant that would fight off the weed. It's as if the weed knows what to do so it can survive.ET
January 16, 2018
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Parasites altering gene expression in their hosts has been known for a long time in animals. In many cases this alters the behaviour of the primary host (e.g., ant) to make it more prone to being eaten by the secondary host (e.g., sheep). It would be naive to expect that it does not also occur in plants.JSmith
January 16, 2018
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