PARAMUTATION is the fascinating ability of specific DNA sequences to communicate in trans to establish meiotically heritable expression states. Intriguingly, newly silenced sequences continue to issue instructions to naïve alleles in subsequent generations. The term "paramutation" was first coined in the 1950s by Alexander Brink to describe this puzzling phenomenon at the r1 locus in maize (Brink 1956); an interaction between specific alleles in heterozygotes led to heritable decreases in gene expression of one allele. Not only was the reduced expression state stable through meiosis, but also the low-expressing allele could induce silencing of another high-expressing allele in subsequent ...