Plants rely on chemical marks added to their DNA to regulate gene activity. One of the most important of these marks is DNA methylation. In most plants, DNA methylation is best known for silencing transposable elements, often described as genomic parasites. However, recent evidence suggests that DNA methylation may also regulate genes during development. How and when this gene-targeted methylation is established, and what it does during plant reproduction, remains poorly understood.
The EPIC project investigates how new DNA methylation patterns are established during reproduction in Marchantia polymorpha, a simple early-diverging land plant. Studying such an evolutionarily ancient species allows researchers to explore how epigenetic regulatory systems emerged and diversified during plant evolution.
The overall objectives of the project are to determine when gene methylation appears during development, identify the molecular mechanisms responsible for targeting it to specific genes, and understand its functional significance in reproductive tissues. By combining single-cell technologies, genome editing, chromatin profiling and comparative genomics, the project aims to provide a mechanistic and evolutionary framework for understanding gene-targeted DNA methylation in plants.