- Ichino, Lucia;
- Boone, Brandon A;
- Strauskulage, Luke;
- Harris, C Jake;
- Kaur, Gundeep;
- Gladstone, Matthew A;
- Tan, Maverick;
- Feng, Suhua;
- Jami-Alahmadi, Yasaman;
- Duttke, Sascha H;
- Wohlschlegel, James A;
- Cheng, Xiaodong;
- Redding, Sy;
- Jacobsen, Steven E
DNA methylation is associated with transcriptional repression of eukaryotic genes and transposons, but the downstream mechanism of gene silencing is largely unknown. Here we describe two Arabidopsis methyl-CpG binding domain proteins, MBD5 and MBD6, that are recruited to chromatin by recognition of CG methylation, and redundantly repress a subset of genes and transposons without affecting DNA methylation levels. These methyl-readers recruit a J-domain protein, SILENZIO, that acts as a transcriptional repressor in loss-of-function and gain-of-function experiments. J-domain proteins often serve as co-chaperones with HSP70s. Indeed, we found that SILENZIO's conserved J-domain motif was required for its interaction with HSP70s and for its silencing function. These results uncover an unprecedented role of a molecular chaperone J-domain protein in gene silencing downstream of DNA methylation.