Literature DB >> 26890210

Genome-wide methylation analysis of retrocopy-associated CpG islands and their genomic environment.

Katrin Grothaus1, Deniz Kanber1, Alexandra Gellhaus2, Barbara Mikat1, Julia Kolarova3, Reiner Siebert3, Dagmar Wieczorek1, Bernhard Horsthemke1.   

Abstract

Gene duplication by retrotransposition, i.e., the reverse transcription of an mRNA and integration of the cDNA into the genome, is an important mechanism in evolution. Based on whole-genome bisulfite sequencing of monocyte DNA, we have investigated the methylation state of all CpG islands (CGIs) associated with a retrocopy (n = 1,319), their genomic environment, as well as the CGIs associated with the ancestral genes. Approximately 10% of retrocopies are associated with a CGI. Whereas almost all CGIs of the human genome are unmethylated, 68% of the CGIs associated with a retrocopy are methylated. In retrocopies resulting from multiple retrotranspositions of the same ancestral gene, the methylation state of the CGI often differs. There is a strong positive correlation between the methylation state of the CGI/retrocopy and their genomic environment, suggesting that the methylation state of the integration site determined the methylation state of the CGI/retrocopy, or that methylation of the retrocopy by a host defense mechanism has spread into the adjacent regions. Only a minor fraction of CGI/retrocopies (n = 195) has intermediate methylation levels. Among these, the previously reported CGI/retrocopy in intron 2 of the RB1 gene (PPP1R26P1) as well as the CGI associated with the retrocopy RPS2P32 identified in this study carry a maternal methylation imprint. In conclusion, these findings shed light on the evolutionary dynamics and constraints of DNA methylation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CpG islands; DNA methylation; RPS2P32; imprinting; retrotransposition

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26890210      PMCID: PMC4854546          DOI: 10.1080/15592294.2016.1145330

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epigenetics        ISSN: 1559-2294            Impact factor:   4.528


  44 in total

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8.  Retrotransposed genes such as Frat3 in the mouse Chromosome 7C Prader-Willi syndrome region acquire the imprinted status of their insertion site.

Authors:  J H Chai; D P Locke; T Ohta; J M Greally; R D Nicholls
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Review 3.  Protein-Coding Genes' Retrocopies and Their Functions.

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5.  Evolutionary conservation of DNA methylation in CpG sites within ultraconserved noncoding elements.

Authors:  Mathia Colwell; Melissa Drown; Kelly Showel; Chelsea Drown; Amanda Palowski; Christopher Faulk
Journal:  Epigenetics       Date:  2018-02-06       Impact factor: 4.528

  5 in total

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