| Literature DB >> 2157149 |
R J Shmookler Reis1, G K Finn, K Smith, S Goldstein.
Abstract
The stability of DNA methylation has been followed in clonal lineages of human diploid fibroblasts, for the gene regions encoding the c-H-ras proto-oncogene and the alpha subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin (alpha-hCG). Although methylation losses predominated, both de novo gains and losses of cytosine methylation were observed in subclones and sub-subclones, at frequencies which differed between individual clonal lineages, and between the 2 gene regions compared. Methylation of these loci varied independently among clones; e.g., a lineage which showed frequent methylation loss in the c-H-ras gene region remained highly methylated for alpha-hCG, and vice versa. Thus, the fidelity with which DNA methylation is inherited in specific endogenous gene regions must be governed by a clone-specific property affecting local chromatin structure, but apparently not by gene expression per se. Late in the replicative life-span of diploid fibroblasts, as cell replication slowed, restriction patterns for methylation-sensitive enzymes became simpler and more discrete, while those for other enzymes did not change. This is interpreted as a consequence of 'clonal succession', in which the fastest-replicating or longest-lived clones/subclones eventually predominate in a cell population; it could also reflect a decreased rate or a non-random selection of methylation changes in late-passage cells.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 2157149 DOI: 10.1016/0921-8734(90)90031-l
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mutat Res ISSN: 0027-5107 Impact factor: 2.433