Dynamic epigenetic reprogramming occurs during mammalian germ cell development, although the targets of this process, including DNA demethylation and de novo methylation, remain poorly understood. We performed genomewide DNA methylation analysis in male and female mouse primordial germ cells at embryonic days 10.5, 13.5, and 16.5 by whole-genome shotgun bisulfite sequencing. Our high-resolution DNA methylome maps demonstrated gender-specific differences in CpG methylation at genome-wide and gene-specific levels during fetal germline progression. There was extensive intra-and intergenic hypomethylation with erasure of methylation marks at imprinted, X-linked, or germlinespecific genes during gonadal sex determination and partial methylation at particular retrotransposons. Following global demethylation and sex determination, CpG sites switched to de novo methylation in males, but the X-linked genes appeared resistant to the wave of de novo methylation. Significant differential methylation at a subset of imprinted loci was identified in both genders, and non-CpG methylation occurred only in male gonocytes. Our data establish the basis for future studies on the role of epigenetic modifications in germline development and other biological processes.
Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), transcribed from the intergenic regions of animal genomes, play important roles in key biological processes. In mice, Zdbf2linc was recently identified as an lncRNA isoform of the paternally expressed imprinted Zdbf2 gene. The functional role of Zdbf2linc remains undefined, but it may control parent-of-origin-specific expression of protein-coding neighbors through epigenetic modification in cis, similar to imprinted Nespas, Kcnq1ot1 and Airn lncRNAs. Here, we identified a novel imprinted long-range non-coding RNA, termed GPR1AS, in the human GPR1-ZDBF2 intergenic region. Although GPR1AS contains no human ZDBF2 exons, this lncRNA is transcribed in the antisense orientation from the GPR1 intron to a secondary, differentially methylated region upstream of the ZDBF2 gene (ZDBF2 DMR), similar to mouse Zdbf2linc. Interestingly, GPR1AS/Zdbf2linc is exclusively expressed in human/mouse placenta with paternal-allele-specific expression and maternal-allele-specific promoter methylation (GPR1/Gpr1 DMR). The paternal-allele specific methylation of the secondary ZDBF2 DMR was established in human placentas as well as somatic lineage. Meanwhile, the ZDBF2 gene showed stochastic paternal-allele-specific expression, possibly methylation-independent, in placental tissues. Overall, we demonstrated that epigenetic regulation mechanisms in the imprinted GPR1-GPR1AS-ZDBF2 region were well-conserved between human and mouse genomes without the high sequence conservation of the intergenic lncRNAs. Our findings also suggest that lncRNAs with highly conserved epigenetic and transcriptional regulation across species arose by divergent evolution from a common ancestor, if they do not have identical exon structures.
Embryonic stem (ES) cells constitute a very important tool for regenerative medicine today. These ES cells, and human ES cells in particular, are almost all derived from embryos obtained by in vitro fertilization (IVF) and from in vitro culture (IVC); however, such in vitro manipulated embryos often show abnormal genomic imprinting, which can lead to the development of various diseases. Nevertheless, several reports have evaluated ES cells derived from in vitro manipulated embryos. In this study, we established ES cells derived from both in vivo and in vitro developed blastocysts (Vivo ES cells and Vitro ES cells, respectively) to compare the methylation status of imprinted genes and gene expression patterns. At very early passages, Vitro ES cells showed an increase in abnormal genomic imprinting compared to Vivo ES cells. In addition, we found that the gene expression patterns of several methylation related-genes frequently shifted to promote demethylation and to inhibit methylation in early-passage Vitro ES cells. In contrast, at later passages, we found no significant differences between Vivo and Vitro ES cells. In conclusion, it is advisable to use early passage Vivo ES cells whenever feasible, or to select ES cell lines with a normal epigenotype.
Abstract. Manipulation of preimplantation embryos in vitro, such as in vitro fertilization (IVF), in vitro culture (IVC), intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) and other assisted reproduction technologies (ART), has contributed to the development of infertility treatment and new animal reproduction methods. However, such embryos often exhibit abnormal DNA methylation patterns in imprinted genes and centromeric satellite repeats. These DNA methylation patterns are established and maintained by three DNA methyltransferases: Dnmt1, Dnmt3a and Dnmt3b. Dnmt3b is responsible for the creation of methylation patterns during the early stage of embryogenesis and consists of many alternative splice variants that affect methylation activity; nevertheless, the roles of these variants have not yet been identified. In this study, we found an alternatively spliced variant of Dnmt3b lacking exon 6 (Dnmt3bΔ6) that is specific to mouse IVC embryos. Dnmt3bΔ6 also showed prominent expression in embryonic stem (ES) cells derived from in vitro manipulated embryos. Interestingly, IVC blastocysts were hypomethylated in centromeric satellite repeat regions that could be susceptible to methylation by Dnmt3b. In vitro methylation activity assays showed that Dnmt3bΔ6 had lower activity than normal Dnmt3b. Our findings suggest that Dnmt3bΔ6 could induce a hypomethylation status especially in in vitro manipulated embryos. Key words: DNA methylation, Dnmt3b, In vitro culture (J. Reprod. Dev. 57: 579-585, 2011) he 5th position cytosine residues in CpG sequences are often methylated in vertebrate genomic DNA [1]. DNA methylation plays an essential role in the normal development of mammalian embryos by regulating gene expression through genomic imprinting, X chromosome inactivation and genomic stability [2][3][4][5][6]. In vertebrates, two types of DNA methyltransferase activity have been reported, the de novo and maintenance types. In mice, de novo-type DNA methylation activity creates gene-specific methylation patterns during the implantation stage of embryogenesis, while maintenance-type activity ensures clonal transmission of lineage-specific methylation patterns during replication. Dnmt1 is responsible for the latter activity. On the other hand, two DNA methyltransferases, Dnmt3a and Dnmt3b, are responsible for creation of methylation patterns during the early stages of embryogenesis [7,8] and have been shown to possess de novo-type DNA methylation activity in vitro [9][10][11][12]. Recent studies have shown that Dnmts function in cooperation with each other to facilitate DNA methylation in both humans and mice [13][14][15].In mice, Dnmt3b is the major de novo DNA methyltransferase in E (embryonic stage) 4.5-7.5 embryos, and its expression is downregulated after midgestation [8,16]. Disruption of Dnmt3b results in embryonic lethality at E13.5 and hypomethylation of centromeric minor satellite repeats [8]. In humans, DNMT3B mutations have been shown to cause ICF (immunodeficiency, chromosomal instabi...
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