| Literature DB >> 22163001 |
Katie L Robinson1, Donya Tohidi-Esfahani, Nathan Lo, Stephen J Simpson, Gregory A Sword.
Abstract
The importance of DNA methylation in mammalian and plant systems is well established. In recent years there has been renewed interest in DNA methylation in insects. Accumulating evidence, both from mammals and insects, points towards an emerging role for DNA methylation in the regulation of phenotypic plasticity. The migratory locust (Locusta migratoria) is a model organism for the study of phenotypic plasticity. Despite this, there is little information available about the degree to which the genome is methylated in this species and genes encoding methylation machinery have not been previously identified. We therefore undertook an initial investigation to establish the presence of a functional DNA methylation system in L. migratoria. We found that the migratory locust possesses genes that putatively encode methylation machinery (DNA methyltransferases and a methyl-binding domain protein) and exhibits genomic methylation, some of which appears to be localised to repetitive regions of the genome. We have also identified a distinct group of genes within the L. migratoria genome that appear to have been historically methylated and show some possible functional differentiation. These results will facilitate more detailed research into the functional significance of DNA methylation in locusts.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22163001 PMCID: PMC3230617 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Extant genome-wide methylation.
(a) DNA extracted from adult head tissue of D. melanogaster (Dm), A. mellifera (Am) and L. migratoria (Lm) and 3T3 fibroblasts of M. musculus (Mm) was digested separately with HpaII and MspI. Approximately 1 µg of DNA per digest was loaded onto the gel. L, NEB 1 KB ladder; h, HpaII; m, MspI. (b) HpaII/MspI digested L. migratoria egg DNA. Tissue for DNA extraction was pooled from four individuals per egg pod. Each egg pod was obtained from a different mother. Approximately 1 µg of DNA per digest was loaded onto the gel. Lanes 1–4, isolated pods 1 and 2 respectively; lanes 6–9, crowded pods 1 and 2 respectively. Data presented here are representative of the ten replicates performed per treatment.
Identity of cloned DNA sequences derived from methyl-CpG enriched portion of the L. migratoria genome.
| Sequence type | Sequence class | Number of clones (%) |
| Repetitive DNA | 15 (31%) | |
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| Unannotated locust EST | 9 (18%) | |
| Unknown sequence | 25 (51%) |
Figure 2Historic genome-wide methylation.
(a) Actual calculated CpG gene frequency values for the entire unigene dataset are presented as a histogram to which predicted normal distributions have been fitted (File S1). (b) Calculated CpG gene frequency values for a subset of unigenes known to be differentially expressed between isolated and crowded locusts; black bars = genes upregulated in isolated locusts, grey bars = genes upregulated in crowded locusts.
Results of functional enrichment analysis.
| CpG | GO term | EASE score | Benjamini |
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| Protein transport | <0.01 | 0.04 | |
| Intracellular protein transport | <0.01 | 0.09 | |
| Biosynthesis | <0.01 | 0.15 | |
| Electron transport | <0.01 | 0.23 | |
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For both low and high CpG gene populations, the five most overrepresented GO terms are presented. The EASE score is a modified Fisher exact probability p-value, the Benjamini value is the raw EASE score corrected for multiple comparisons using the Benjamini- Hochberg false discovery rate method [72]. Significantly overrepresented functional categories (p<0.05) are shown in italics.
Figure 3Methylation machinery of L. migratoria.
ClustalW alignment of (a) Dnmt1, (b) Dnmt2 and (c) MBD2/3 partial sequences. For clarity, only regions with homology to conserved motifs are presented. Sequences from a larger selection of species were used for phylogenetic analyses, but for simplicity, only a subset of these is shown here. The reported S. gregaria Dnmt1 sequence could not be aligned with the other Dnmt1 sequences presented here. Completely conserved residues are shaded black; 80–99% identical residues are dark grey; 60–79% identical residues are light grey; less than 60% identical residues are white. Alignments were constructed using MEGA4 [74] and formatted with Geneious Pro 4.8.5 [76]. Accession numbers are as follows: Acyrthosiphon pisum Dnmt1a, XP_001942687.1; A. pisum Dnmt1b, XP_001942632.1; Apis mellifera Dmnt1a, NP_001164522.1; A. mellifera Dnmt1b, XP_001122269; Bombyx mori Dnmt1, BAD67189.1; Ciona intestinalis Dnmt1, XP_002122948.1; Daphnia pulex Dnmt1, EFX80183.1; Harpegnathos saltator Dnmt1, EFN76367.1; Homo sapiens Dnmt1, NP_001124295.1; Hydra magnipapillata Dnmt1, XP_002155714.1; L. migratoria Dnmt1 type 1, FR850040; L. migratoria Dnmt1 type 2, FR850041; Pediculus humanus Dnmt1a, XP_002432160.1; P. humanus Dnmt1b, XP_002431878.1; Strongylocentrotus purpuratus Dnmt1, XP_780273.1; T. castaneum Dnmt1, XP_001814230.1; A. pisum Dnmt2, XP_001949338; A. mellifera Dnmt2, XP_393991; H. sapiens Dnmt2, 1G55_A; L. migratoria Dnmt2, FR850042; A. mellifera MBD2/3, XP_392422.2; L. migratoria Dnmt1 MBD2/3, FR850043; H. sapiens MBD2, NP_003918.1; H. sapiens MBD3, NP_003917.1. (d) Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of animal Dnmt1 sequences. In constructing the tree 339 amino acid sites were used. Posterior probabilities greater than 0.5 and the expected number of substitutions per site (scale bar) are indicated. Two distinct Pediculis humanus Dnmt1 sequences were present in GenBank. As their isoform type was not specified, they were arbitrarily named Dnmt1a and Dnmt1b. Accession numbers are listed above.
Primers used in this study.
| Gene | Primer | Sequence (5′-3′) |
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