| Literature DB >> 26974671 |
Antje Motzek1, Jelena Knežević2, Olivier J Switzeny3, Alexis Cooper1, Ivo Barić4, Robert Beluzić2, Kevin A Strauss5,6, Erik G Puffenberger5,6, S Harvey Mudd7, Oliver Vugrek2, Ulrich Zechner1.
Abstract
S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase (AHCY) deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive disorder in methionine metabolism caused by mutations in the AHCY gene. Main characteristics are psychomotor delay including delayed myelination and myopathy (hypotonia, absent tendon reflexes etc.) from birth, mostly associated with hypermethioninaemia, elevated serum creatine kinase levels and increased genome wide DNA methylation. The prime function of AHCY is to hydrolyse and efficiently remove S-adenosylhomocysteine, the by-product of transmethylation reactions and one of the most potent methyltransferase inhibitors. In this study, we set out to more specifically characterize DNA methylation changes in blood samples from patients with AHCY deficiency. Global DNA methylation was increased in two of three analysed patients. In addition, we analysed the DNA methylation levels at differentially methylated regions (DMRs) of six imprinted genes (MEST, SNRPN, LIT1, H19, GTL2 and PEG3) as well as Alu and LINE1 repetitive elements in seven patients. Three patients showed a hypermethylation in up to five imprinted gene DMRs. Abnormal methylation in Alu and LINE1 repetitive elements was not observed. We conclude that DNA hypermethylation seems to be a frequent but not a constant feature associated with AHCY deficiency that affects different genomic regions to different degrees. Thus AHCY deficiency may represent an ideal model disease for studying the molecular origins and biological consequences of DNA hypermethylation due to impaired cellular methylation status.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26974671 PMCID: PMC4790936 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0151261
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
List of analysed patients with AHCY deficiency.
| Patient | Gender | Age at blood withdrawal for DNA extraction | Age at begin of dietary treatment | Elevation of plasma SAH levels | Elevation of plasma SAM levels | SAM/SAH ratio | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | m | ~ 1 year | > 1 year | c.428A>G; p.Y143C (pat)c.336G>A; p.W112X (mat) | 150x | 30x | 0.59 | [ |
| B | m | After birth | < 0.5 years | c.428A>G; p.Y143C (pat) c.336G>A; p.W112X (mat) | 5x | 1,6x | 1.13 | [ |
| C | m | After birth | < 0.5 years | c.428A>G; p.Y143C (pat) c.336G>A; p.W112X (mat) | 6,5x | 1,8x | 0.28 | [ |
| D | f | ~ 1 month | < 0.5 years | c.428A>G; p.Y143C (pat) c.336G>A; p.W112X (mat) | unknown | unknown | unknown | unpublished |
| E | m | ~ 26 years | 1–6 years | c.428A>G; p.Y143C (pat) c.266C>T; p.A89V ( | 28x | 20x | 0.71 | [ |
| F | f | ~ 14 days | 76 days | c.145C>T; p.R49C (pat) c.257A>G; p.D86G (mat) | 81 | 23 | 0.28 | [ |
| G | f | > 1,5 years | 22 months | c.982T>G; p.Y328D (pat) c.428A>G; p.Y143C (mat) | 200x | 50x | 0.62 | [ |
Patients A-D are siblings. Treatment by dietary methionine restriction and supplementation with creatine and phosphatidylcholine lead to normalisation of SAH levels [5, 6]. Dietary treatment for patient E was stopped after 5 years and included restriction of methionine to 20 mg/kg/day and of protein to 1.0–1.4 g/kg/day. Patient F was dietary treated with 50% methionine-free formula (Hominex®) and 50% Pregestimil®, providing 27 mg/kg per day of methionine, and supplements of creatine (3 g/day) and phosphatidylcholine (1,200 mg/day) [8]. Dietary therapy of Patient G consisted of methionine restriction (≤ 35 mg/kg/day; i.e. ≤ 2 g total dietary protein per kg/day) and dietary supplements of creatine (300 mg/kg/day) and phosphatidylcholine (200 mg/kg/day) [21]. SAM/SAH ratios were directly taken from the references or calculated with the absolute concentrations given in the references. m = male, f = female, pat = paternal, mat = maternal
a values obtained at age of 26 years
b died at age of 4 months
Fig 1Genome wide methylation levels in three patients with AHCY deficiency and controls.
Patients A and B showed genome wide methylation levels more than five times as high as those of controls, patient F displayed a genome wide methylation level similar to that of controls. The bars display the ratio of methylation levels of the three patients normalised to that of three control samples in three independent measurements. Variation between the three control samples was included via error propagation.
Methylation levels determined by bisulfite pyrosequencing analysis.
| Patient | LINE1 (3 CpGs) | ALU (3 CpGs) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 52,46 ± 5,01 | 64,47 ± 0,56 | 76,33 ± 2,79 | 25,45 ± 1,77 | |||||
| 49,31 ± 1,95 | 50,81 ± 1,42 | 54,95 ± 0,85 | 55,24 ± 2,55 | 42,03 ± 4,73 | 58,68 ± 2,56 | 82,84 ± 5,05 | 25,05 ± 1,54 | |
| 45,16 ± 3,04 | 46,29 ± 3,67 | 47,61 ± 5,36 | 50,69 ± 1,67 | 39,16 ± 3,76 | 56,74 ± 2,03 | 80,41 ± 11,13 | 25,75 ± 1,49 | |
| 49,60 ± 5,04 | 46,43 ± 5,07 | 58,57 ± 2,22 | 71,98 ± 1,32 | 26,34 ± 1,27 | ||||
| 43,62 ± 3,80 | 43,66 ± 3,28 | 50,57 ± 0,24 | 52,53 ± 2,61 | 37,88 ± 6,89 | 52,24 ± 2,61 | 70,44 ± 1,50 | 26,34 ± 1,81 | |
| 63,36 ± 1,36 | 75,60 ± 1,77 | 27,98 ± 0,53 | ||||||
| 47,48 ± 0,84 | 53,81 ± 0,24 | 52,29 ± 1,11 | 50,38 ± 3,36 | 44,32 ± 3,46 | 58,11 ± 0,98 | 78,08 ± 1,51 | 29,49 ± 0,03 | |
| 47,58 ± 1,99 | 50,49 ± 3,72 | 51,09 ± 3,82 | 55,85 ± 4,25 | 44,37 ± 1,87 | 61,59 ± 3,57 | 77,80 ± 2,27 | 27,36 ± 1,00 |
Methylation levels [%] of six imprinted gene DMRs and two repetitive elements were measured. The number of analysed CpG sites is given in brackets below each analysed region. Samples with methylation levels differing by more than 10% to those of controls are highlighted in bold, samples with methylation levels differing by more than 20% are highlighted in bold and underlined.
Fig 2Three patients with AHCY deficiency show abnormal hypermethylation in some imprinted gene DMRs.
Bisulfite pyrosequencing results of six imprinted gene DMRs as well as LINE1 and Alu repetitive elements in seven patients and controls. Only patients A, D and F showed abnormal hypermethylation of some, but not all imprinted gene DMRs. No methylation errors were observed for the repetitive elements. The bars show the mean methylation values, the error bars display the standard deviation of two to four independent measurements. Moderately abnormal methylation values are indicated by a single asterisk (*), highly abnormal methylation values by a double asterisk (**).
Fig 3Methylation values of single CpG sites analysed in the MEST bisulfite pyrosequencing assay.
DNA methylation [%] determined by pyrosequencing at five consecutive CpG sites in the MEST DMR in the seven patients and controls. The CpG sites within the pyrosequencing assay are ordered according to their indicated position in the genome (Ensembl version 76).
Methylation levels determined by high resolution melting analysis.
| Patient | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 81,76 ± 1,85 | 86,84 ±4,31 | 50,07 ± 2,07 | |
| 34,62 ± 5,51 | 48,14 ±5,38 | 30,95 ± 11,96 | |
| 71,12 ± 3,85 | 84,78 ±6,05 | 53,07 ± 2,07 | |
| 46,24 ± 3,49 | 43,74 ±3,68 | 33,26 ± 5,21 |
Methylation levels [%] of three imprinted gene DMRs were measured. The number of analysed CpG sites is given in brackets below each analysed region.
Fig 4HRM analysis confirms pyrosequencing data of patients A, B and F.
High resolution melting (HRM) analysis gives the mean methylation status of the complete PCR amplicons of three imprinted gene DMRs. PCR primers for the MEST, SNRPN and H19 DMRs used for pyrosequencing also worked for HRM analysis to confirm pyrosequencing results. DNA of patients A, B and F were analysed together with controls. The mean values ± standard deviation did not differ by more than 10% methylation between pyrosequencing and HRM analysis for any of the analysed DMRs. The bars show the mean methylation values, the error bars the standard deviation of two independent measurements.