piRNAs Can Trigger a Multigenerational Epigenetic Memory in the Germline of C. elegans

Alyson Ashe(University of Cambridge), Alexandra Sapetschnig(University of Cambridge), Eva‐Maria Weick(University of Cambridge), Jacinth Mitchell(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Marloes P. Bagijn(University of Cambridge), Amy Cording(University of Cambridge), Anna-Lisa Doebley(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Leonard D. Goldstein(University of Cambridge), Nicolas J. Lehrbach(University of Cambridge), Jérémie Le Pen(University of Cambridge), Greta Pintacuda(Scuola Normale Superiore), Aisa Sakaguchi(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Peter Sarkies(University of Cambridge), Shawn Ahmed(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Eric A. Miska(University of Cambridge)
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Abstract

Transgenerational effects have wide-ranging implications for human health, biological adaptation, and evolution; however, their mechanisms and biology remain poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that a germline nuclear small RNA/chromatin pathway can maintain stable inheritance for many generations when triggered by a piRNA-dependent foreign RNA response in C. elegans. Using forward genetic screens and candidate approaches, we find that a core set of nuclear RNAi and chromatin factors is required for multigenerational inheritance of environmental RNAi and piRNA silencing. These include a germline-specific nuclear Argonaute HRDE1/WAGO-9, a HP1 ortholog HPL-2, and two putative histone methyltransferases, SET-25 and SET-32. piRNAs can trigger highly stable long-term silencing lasting at least 20 generations. Once established, this long-term memory becomes independent of the piRNA trigger but remains dependent on the nuclear RNAi/chromatin pathway. Our data present a multigenerational epigenetic inheritance mechanism induced by piRNAs.


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