Nat Plants. 2017 Dec;3(12):926-929. doi: 10.1038/s41477-017-0066-9. Epub 2017 Dec 4.
Low number of fixed somatic mutations in a long-lived oak tree.
Schmid-Siegert E1, Sarkar N2,3,4, Iseli C1, Calderon S1, Gouhier-Darimont C5, Chrast J2, Cattaneo P5, Schütz F2, Farinelli L6, Pagni M1, Schneider M7, Voumard J8, Jaboyedoff M8, Fankhauser C2, Hardtke CS5, Keller L3, Pannell JR3, Reymond A2, Robinson-Rechavi M3,4, Xenarios I1,2,7, Reymond P9.
Abstract
Because plants do not possess a defined germline, deleterious somatic mutations can be passed to gametes, and a large number of cell divisions separating zygote from gamete formation may lead to many mutations in long-lived plants. We sequenced the genome of two terminal branches of a 234-year-old oak tree and found several fixed somatic single-nucleotide variants whose sequential appearance in the tree could be traced along nested sectors of younger branches. Our data suggest that stem cells of shoot meristems in trees are robustly protected from the accumulation of mutations.
- PMID: 29209081