Methylation of CpG dinucleotides within proximal promoters is often associated with transcriptional silencing. Methylation-dependent repression is well established for hypermethylated CpG island promoters that are characterized by a high density of CpG residues. The effect of CpG DNA methylation on CpG-poor promoters is less well characterized, probably due to the lack of convenient assay systems to test promoter activities in vitro. In this report, we describe a novel luciferase reporter vector, pCpGL, which completely lacks CpG dinucleotides and can be used to study the effect of promoter DNA methylation in transfection assays. Whereas a traditional reporter vector that contains a large number of backbone CpG residues significantly represses a CpG-free promoter when methylated, our new reporter vector is only repressed due to the presence of functionally important, methylated CpG residues. The pCpGL vector provides a useful tool to study the effects of CpG methylation on CpG-rich and CpG-poor promoters.
DNA methylation participates in establishing and maintaining chromatin structures and regulates gene transcription during mammalian development and cellular differentiation. With few exceptions, research thus far has focused on gene promoters, and little is known about the extent, functional relevance, and regulation of cell type-specific DNA methylation at promoter-distal sites. Here, we present a comprehensive analysis of differential DNA methylation in human conventional CD4+ T cells (Tconv) and CD4 + CD25 + regulatory T cells (Treg), cell types whose differentiation and function are known to be controlled by epigenetic mechanisms. Using a novel approach that is based on the separation of a genome into methylated and unmethylated fractions, we examined the extent of lineage-specific DNA methylation across whole gene loci. More than 100 differentially methylated regions (DMRs) were identified that are present mainly in cell type-specific genes (e.g., FOXP3, IL2RA, CTLA4, CD40LG, and IFNG) and show differential patterns of histone H3 lysine 4 methylation. Interestingly, the majority of DMRs were located at promoter-distal sites, and many of these areas harbor DNA methylation-dependent enhancer activity in reporter gene assays. Thus, our study provides a comprehensive, locuswide analysis of lineage-specific methylation patterns in Treg and Tconv cells, links cell type-specific DNA methylation with histone methylation and regulatory function, and identifies a number of cell type-specific, CpG methylationsensitive enhancers in immunologically relevant genes.
The methylation of CpG islands is associated with transcriptional repression and, in cancer, leads to the abnormal silencing of tumor suppressor genes. Because aberrant hypermethylation may be used as a marker for disease, a sensitive method for the global detection of DNA methylation events is of particular importance. We describe a novel and robust technique, called methyl-CpG immunoprecipitation, which allows the unbiased genome-wide profiling of CpG methylation in limited DNA samples. The approach is based on a recombinant, antibody-like protein that efficiently binds native CpG-methylated DNA. In combination with CpG island microarrays, the technique was used to identify >100 genes with aberrantly methylated CpG islands in three myeloid leukemia cell lines. Interestingly, within all hypermethylation targets, genes involved in transcriptional regulation were significantly overrepresented. More than half of the identified genes were absent in microarray expression studies in either leukemia or normal monocytes, indicating that hypermethylation in cancer may be largely independent of the transcriptional status of the affected gene. Most individually tested genes were also hypermethylated in primary blast cells from acute myeloid leukemia patients, suggesting that our approach can identify novel potential disease markers. The technique may prove useful for genome-wide comparative methylation analysis not only in malignancies. (Cancer Res 2006; 66(12): 6118-28)
Aberrant DNA methylation at CpG islands is thought to contribute to cancer initiation and progression, but mechanisms that establish and maintain DNA methylation status during tumorigenesis or normal development remain poorly understood. In this study, we used methyl-CpG immunoprecipitation to generate comparative DNA methylation profiles of healthy and malignant cells (acute leukemia and colorectal carcinoma) for human CpG islands across the genome. While searching for sequence patterns that characterize DNA methylation states, we discovered several nonredundant sequences in CpG islands that were resistant to aberrant de novo methylation in cancer and that resembled consensus binding sites for general transcription factors (TF). Comparing methylation profiles with global CpG island binding data for specific protein 1, nuclear respiratory factor 1, and yin-yang 1 revealed that their DNA binding activity in normal blood cells correlated strictly with an absence of de novo methylation in cancer. In addition, global evidence showed that binding of any of these TFs to their consensus motif depended on their co-occurrence with neighboring consensus motifs. In summary, our results had two major implications. First, they pointed to a major role for cooperative binding of TFs in maintaining the unmethylated status of CpG islands in health and disease. Second, our results suggest that the majority of de novo methylated CpG islands are characterized by the lack of sequence motif combinations and the absence of activating TF binding.
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