| Literature DB >> 26216216 |
Marco Trerotola1, Valeria Relli2, Pasquale Simeone3, Saverio Alberti4,5.
Abstract
Genome-wide association studies of complex physiological traits and diseases consistently found that associated genetic factors, such as allelic polymorphisms or DNA mutations, only explained a minority of the expected heritable fraction. This discrepancy is known as "missing heritability", and its underlying factors and molecular mechanisms are not established. Epigenetic programs may account for a significant fraction of the "missing heritability." Epigenetic modifications, such as DNA methylation and chromatin assembly states, reflect the high plasticity of the genome and contribute to stably alter gene expression without modifying genomic DNA sequences. Consistent components of complex traits, such as those linked to human stature/height, fertility, and food metabolism or to hereditary defects, have been shown to respond to environmental or nutritional condition and to be epigenetically inherited. The knowledge acquired from epigenetic genome reprogramming during development, stem cell differentiation/de-differentiation, and model organisms is today shedding light on the mechanisms of (a) mitotic inheritance of epigenetic traits from cell to cell, (b) meiotic epigenetic inheritance from generation to generation, and (c) true transgenerational inheritance. Such mechanisms have been shown to include incomplete erasure of DNA methylation, parental effects, transmission of distinct RNA types (mRNA, non-coding RNA, miRNA, siRNA, piRNA), and persistence of subsets of histone marks.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26216216 PMCID: PMC4517414 DOI: 10.1186/s40246-015-0041-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genomics ISSN: 1473-9542 Impact factor: 4.639
Molecular mechanisms of epigenetic transgenerational heredity
| Steps | Molecular mechanisms |
|---|---|
| DNA sequence-invariant heritable traits | DNA methylation/histone post-translational modifications |
| DNA methylation maintenance across cell division cycles | Hemimethylated DNA-guided, DNMT1-mediated CpG methylation pattern maintenance |
| DNA demethylation | Passive DNA demethylation |
| 5-mC to 5-hmC conversion | |
| Active DNA demethylation | |
| Glycosylase-mediated base removal and base excision repair mechanisms | |
| Histone code | Condensed chromatin |
| HAT inactivation | |
| HMT activation | |
| Relaxed chromatin | |
| HAT activation | |
| HMT inactivation | |
| Epigenetic modulation of mother-to-fetus transmission | Maternal nutrition status |
| Maternal exposure to environmental toxins and food contaminants | |
| BPA | |
| Phthalates | |
| Dioxins | |
| Tobacco smoke | |
| Cell differentiation and body development | Epigenetic signature reprogramming |
| Erasure/reprogramming in the zygote (mitotic transmission) | |
| Erasure/reprogramming in PGCs (meiotic transmission) | |
| Gamete-carried transmission | |
| DNA methylation profiles in sperm and oocytes | |
| H3K4 and H3K27 histone methylation in sperm cells | |
| RNA molecules carried by sperm cells (mRNA, non-coding RNA, miRNA, siRNA, piRNA) | |
| Stem cell reprogramming | Epigenetic signature of induced pluripotency |
| Decreased TETs/decreased hydroxymethylation at ES gene promoters | |
| Reprogramming-resistant regions enriched for H3K9me3 |
Fig. 1DNA methylation/demethylation mechanics. a Methyl groups (green circles) are transferred to C in order to generate 5-mC. DNA methyltransferases (DNMT) catalyze this process. In the “active DNA demethylation” the TET DNA demethylase converts 5-mC to 5-hmC, which is further processed to 5-fC and 5-caC. These residues are targets for the DNA repair pathway, whose most critical component is the hTDG, which is responsible also for the repair of U:G and T:G mismatches. DNA demethylation can also occur through spontaneous cytosine deamination, which is catalyzed by AID/APOBEC enzymes. This gives rise to 5-hmU and T bases. Transient U:G and T:G mismatches can be repaired by the TDG/BER pathway. b De novo and maintenance methylation occur using unmethylated DNA and hemimethylated/post-replication DNA as templates for DNMT enzymes. In the absence of maintenance methylation, progressive dilution of 5-mC or its oxidized derivatives at DNA replication can determine the appearance of unmethylated DNA. This process is known as “passive DNA demethylation”
Fig. 2Histone modifications and DNA cooperate in re-shaping chromatin organization and regulating gene expression. a (left) De novo DNA methylation occurs on unmethylated DNA. It is catalyzed by the DNMT3, whose subunits can be positioned in proximity of their target sites through physical interaction with unmethylated H3K4. a (right) Maintenance DNA methylation occurs during the DNA replication and is catalyzed by the DNMT1. Uhrf1 and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) associates to DNMT1 and recruit it to the replication fork, concentrating its activity on hemimethylated DNA. The Uhrf1 TTD domain interacts with H3K9me. This binding allows a faithful propagation of DNA methylation patterns throughout mitosis. b (top) HDAC and the transcription factor complex (TFC) can be recruited on sensitive promoters, leading to histone deacetylation. HMT-driven methylation of the histone tails causes tight wrapping of DNA around nucleosome cores and inhibition of gene expression. b (bottom) The accumulation of HAT-driven histone acetylation determines DNA relaxation around the nucleosomes surrounding HAT-sensitive promoters; this leads to increased transcription and gene expression. c Methylation of H3K9 plays a central role in non-DNA-dependent mechanisms of regulation of gene activity (top). Hsp90 has a strong effect on the histone code via stabilization of KDM4B, which demethylases H3K9 (middle). Non-coding RNAs alter the histone code through siRNA-dependent mechanisms that lead to direct competition between BORDERLINE ncRNAs and H3K9me for binding to the HP1 proteins, such as Swi6. This occurs at heterochromatin/euchromatin boundary sites and counteracts the spreading of heterochromatin into neighboring euchromatin (bottom). A acetyl groups, M methyl groups, HAT histone acetyltranferase, HDAC histone deacetylase, HMT histone methyltransferase
Epigenetic hereditary traits contribution to developmental diseasesa
| Non-cancerous syndromes | Phenotypes/clinical features | Molecular defects |
|---|---|---|
| ATR-X | Upswept frontal hair line; hypertelorism; epicanthic folds; flat nasal bridge; small triangular upturned nose; tented upper lip; everted lower lip; hypotonic facies | Mutations in |
| Fragile X | Mild to severe intellectual disabilities; elongated face; large or protruding ears; macroorchidism; stereotypic movements (e.g., hand-flapping); social anxiety | Expansion and methylation of CGG repeat in |
| ICF | Hypertelorism; low-set ears; epicanthal folds; macroglossia |
|
| Angelman | Severe intellectual and developmental disabilities; sleep disturbance; seizures; jerky movements (e.g., hand-flapping); frequent laughter or smiling; a happy behavior | Deregulation of one or more imprinted genes at 15q11–13 (maternal) |
| Prader–Willi | Low muscle tone; short stature; incomplete sexual development; cognitive disabilities; chronic feeling of hunger leading to excessive eating and life-threatening obesity | Deregulation of one or more imprinted genes at 15q11–13 (paternal) |
| Beckwith–Wiedemann | Macroglossia; macrosomia; midline abdominal wall defects; ear creases or ear pits; neonatal hypoglycemia | Deregulation of one or more imprinted genes at 11p15.5 (e.g., |
| Rett | Small hands and feet; decelerated rate of head growth; repetitive stereotyped hand movements (e.g., wringing and/or repeatedly putting hands into the mouth); gastrointestinal disorders; seizures; no verbal skills; scoliosis; growth failure; constipation |
|
| Rubinstein–Taybi | Short stature; moderate to severe learning difficulties; broad thumbs and first toes; increased risk of developing benign and malignant tumors, leukemia, and lymphoma | Mutation in CREB-binding protein (histone acetylation) |
| Coffin–Lowry | Abnormal growth; cardiac defects; kyphoscoliosis; auditory and visual abnormalities | Mutation in Rsk-2 (histone phosphorylation) |
| Silver–Russel | Feeding problems; hypoglycemia; excessive sweating; triangular shaped face with a small jaw and a pointed chin that tends to lessen slightly with age; curved down mouth; blue tinge to the whites of the eyes in younger children; normal size of head circumference, disproportionate to a small body size; wide and late-closing fontanelle; clinodactyly; body asymmetric growth; precocious puberty; low muscle tone; gastroesophageal reflux disease; lack of subcutaneous fat; late closing of the opening between the heart hemispheres; constipation | Loss of methylation on the |
aPhenotype-genotype correlations were extracted from the OMIM databank (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/omim)
Epigenetic heredity of cancer-causing genes
| Cancers | |
|---|---|
| Bladder | Aberrant methylation of |
| Brain | Aberrant methylation of |
| Breast | Aberrant methylation of |
| Cervix | Hypermethylation of |
| Colon-Rectum | Aberrant methylation of |
| Esophagus | Aberrant methylation of |
| Head/Neck | Hypermethylation of |
| Kidney | Hypermethylation of |
| Leukemia | Hypermethylation of |
| Liver | Aberrant methylation of multiple genes |
| Lung | Hypermethylation of |
| Lymphoma/Myeloma | Hypermethylation of |
| Ovary | Hypermethylation of |
| Pancreas | Hypermethylation of |
| Prostate | Hypermethylation of |
| Rhabdomyosarcoma | Hypermethylation of |
| Stomach | Hypomethylation of |
| Thymus | Hypomethylation of |
| Urothelial | Hypomethylation of Satellite DNA |
| Uterus | Hypermethylation of |
Fig. 3Epigenetic factors influencing human development and growth. The human life cycle is represented in the scheme. Major factors influencing the epigenetic programs and the maintenance of epigenetic patterns at both DNA and chromatin (histone code) levels are the maternal lifestyle during pregnancy and the personal exposure to harmful environments during post-natal growth and adult life