Literature DB >> 27228574

Genomic Imprinting: A New Epigenetic Perspective of Sleep Regulation.

Valter Tucci1.   

Abstract

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27228574      PMCID: PMC4881917          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS Genet        ISSN: 1553-7390            Impact factor:   5.917


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Overview

A growing corpus of data indicates that epigenetic mechanisms regulate sleep and sleep-wake cycles. Here, I discuss recent evidence showing that genomic imprinting, an epigenetic mechanism that regulates parent-of-origin effects in mammals, is involved in the control of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. REM sleep is an evolutionarily recent form of sleep that is characterized by important electrophysiological, metabolic, and thermoregulatory changes. The link between imprinting and REM sleep offers new insights into the epigenetic mechanisms underlying sleep physiology. Sleep is associated with significant changes in the expression of many genes, which suggests that sleep regulates a number of physiological and/or behavioural functions. Approximately 15% of transcripts across the genome oscillate along sleep-wake cycles, more than 40% of protein-coding genes oscillate in at least one tissue [1], and a number of molecular pathways sense epigenetic changes that depend on sleep. For example, sleep loss disrupts the circadian rhythm in 20% of the oscillating genes in the brain [2] and affects the DNA binding of clock genes by acting on the methylation state of their promoters [3]. Moreover, significant methylation changes have recently been reported in mice when their sleep-wake cycles are manipulated starting in the early stages of development after birth [4]. There are various theories for the function of sleep. For example, one theory was proposed that the function of sleep is to decrease energy demands, while another theory suggested that sleep is to restore cellular and subcellular processes [5]. At the moment, a new theory proposes that a positive selective pressure for sleep is associated with the role of sleep in fundamental mechanisms that regulate the communication between neurons [6] and, more generally, in connectivity processes that wire the brain [7]. Neuronal properties are the most frequently investigated functions of sleep, and these studies indicate that sleep has a significant role in cognitive processes (e.g., memory consolidation [8]). Novel insights are now emerging for the epigenetic mechanisms regulating sleep. In particular, the role of genomic imprinting in sleep regulation has been systematically studied in recent years. Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic mechanism that results in the allele-specific expression of approximately 200 genes according to the parental origin and is unique to mammals among vertebrates [9]. Imprinted genes play a crucial role in the placenta and prenatal development and, after birth, have been demonstrated to control important metabolic and physiological functions (e.g., thermogenesis) as well as behavioural and cognitive processes [10,11]. Imprinted genes have important roles during the perinatal period [11], which is a crucial time window in development, for the formation and integration of all biological systems, including the homeostatic control of sleep and the formation of the internal (circadian) clock [12,13].Recent studies have reported that imprinted genes are involved in important control mechanisms for both the ‘S” (homeostatic) and “C” (circadian) processes of sleep (see Box 1).

Box 1. Sleep Regulation

Sleep results from the synergism between at least two major processes: a homeostatic (process S) regulatory mechanism that depends on the accumulation of the sleep drive during wakefulness, and a circadian (process C) self-sustained mechanism that sets the time for sleeping and waking throughout the 24-hour daily cycle [14]. Central and peripheral oscillators control the circadian process, and the main light-dependent oscillator is composed of a dense group of neurons in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the hypothalamus [15]. However, the sleep homeostatic process is controlled by a neurobiological network that is primarily distributed in the brain [16] and involves several (and perhaps local) brain mechanisms [17]. Moreover, sleep is commonly divided into two major physiological stages: rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and non-REM (NREM) sleep. During REM sleep, there is an increase in neuronal and metabolic activities, a reduction in muscle tone, and several irregularities in autonomic and thermoregulatory functions [18], whereas NREM sleep is significantly more quiet. REM sleep apparently contravenes the restorative aspects of sleep; however, the function of this “paradoxical” state remains unknown. Although REM sleep may serve important functions, a lack of REM sleep (e.g., the severe suppression of REM sleep caused by specific pharmacological treatments [19]) has no major consequences for survival in humans; however, severe detrimental effects have been observed in rats [5]. For example, opposite imprinting defects at chromosome 15q11–13 are responsible for opposite sleep phenotypes as well as opposite neurodevelopmental abnormalities, namely the Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) and the Angelman syndrome (AS) [14,20]. Whilst the PWS is due to loss of paternal expression of alleles, the AS is due to loss of maternal expression. The 15q11–13 region consists of several genes that are biparentally expressed (i.e., GABA receptor genes), paternally expressed (i.e., MKRN3, MAGEL2, NECDIN, and a C/D small nucleolar RNA [snoRNA] cluster), and maternally expressed (i.e., UBE3A, a HECT-domain E3 ubiquitin ligase [also known as E6-AP] that is involved in proteasome degradation). Maternal additions or paternal deletions of alleles at chromosome 15q11–13 are characterized by temperature control abnormalities, excessive sleepiness, and specific sleep architecture changes, particularly REM sleep deficits [21-23]. Conversely, paternal additions or maternal deletions at chromosome 15q11–13 are characterized by reductions in sleep and frequent and prolonged night wakings [24,25]. In the mouse, specific neurodevelopmental processes, including sleep and the circadian clock, are associated with the maternally expressed Ube3a. Ehlen et al. [26] explored the circadian and sleep functions in Ube3a mice, and they report that the Ube3a gene is an important player in the regulation of sleep homeostasis (the process “S” of sleep). In particular, the architecture of non-REM and REM sleep in Ube3a mice differed from that in wild-type mice; however, although the overall total amount of non-REM sleep over a 24-hour period was similar among the two genotypes, the mice carrying the maternal deletion of the Ube3a gene displayed a ~20% reduction in REM sleep compared with the control. Studying the process “C” of sleep, conflicting data have emerged regarding whether Ube3a controls the circadian clock. The maternal deletion of the Ube3A allele in the Ube3a mouse line has led to significant [27] and nonsignificant [26] differences in the length of the circadian period. However, Shi and colleagues [27] demonstrated a role for Ube3a in regulating the turnover of a core element of the circadian transcriptional-translational feedback loop, Bmal1. This work is consistent with the recent finding that Bmal1 is a target of E6-AP in the ubiquitination process [28]. Moreover, although the paternal Ube3a allele is considered silenced throughout the brain, Ehlen et al. [26] demonstrated that the protein is widely expressed in the SCN of Ube3a mice. Therefore, in contrast to the rest of the brain, Ube3a appears biallelically expressed in the SCN. Within the same 15q11–13 region, we reported that the paternally expressed noncoding snoRNA, SNORD116, has an important role in sleep physiology and thermoregulation [29]. In particular, we observed that the deletion of SNORD116/Snord116 in humans and mice led to increased REM sleep and REM intrusions during wakefulness. The regulation of REM sleep is strongly influenced by daily variations of thermoregulatory demand [30]. In our study, mice lacking Snord116 displayed an increased peripheral body temperature, which suggests that Snord116 may regulate the interplay between sleep and daily thermoregulation profiles. However, the circadian rhythm of the behavioural activity in these mice was not altered, which indicated that the Snord116 locus regulates metabolic-dependent sleep homeostasis but not circadian rhythms in adulthood, though targeting a different gene of the central chromosome 7 suggested light-dependent circadian control. Indeed, the paternally expressed protein-coding gene Magel2 was found to modulate light-dependent circadian rhythms [31]. An additional example of the genomic imprinting modulation of sleep was shown in our previous work on the maternally expressed imprinted gene Gnas [32], which maps to the distal imprinted region of mouse chromosome 2. The loss of Gnas imprinting dramatically reduced REM sleep and was associated with an increase in the core body temperature in mice [32]. Changes in body temperature and REM sleep in the Snord116 and Gnas models represent different situations in terms of expressed gene dosage. Loss of expression of paternal Snord116 results in enhanced REM sleep, implying that the normal function of this gene is to decrease REM sleep. The effect on body temperature suggests that a normal function of paternal Snord116 is to decrease peripheral body temperature. Double expression of maternal Gnas (due to loss of imprinting) results in decreased REM sleep, which might imply that the normal role of imprinted single dose Gnas is also to decrease REM (assuming additive effects of expressed gene dosage of Gnas on REM). The effect on body temperature suggests that a normal function of maternal Gnas is to elevate core body temperature. Reduced body temperature during sleep is caused by heat dissipation, which increases the skin temperature and promotes heat dissipation from the core to the periphery [33]. Genomic imprinting in endothermic animals is involved in specific functions that counteract hypothermia. Several imprinted genes (i.e., Gnas, Gnasxl, Ndn, Dlk1, and Dio3) that are expressed in brown adipocytes control the thermogenesis process through the mitochondrial uncoupling protein 1 (Ucp1) [10,32]. We showed that genomic imprinting alterations of Gnas affect Ucp1 expression, temperature control, and sleep [32]. In conclusion, alterations in the core-to-peripheral temperature gradient, such as those determined by genomic imprinting defects, determine physiological disruption of normal sleep. Taken together, these results indicate that both maternal and paternal imprinted genes significantly control REM sleep, which may occur through the control of circadian variations of thermoregulation. Covariation between ecological, physiological, and phylogenetic factors can account for significant interactions between genomic imprinting, sleep, and body temperature (see Box 2).

Box 2. Genomic Imprinting and REM Sleep Evolution

Genomic imprinting evolved in therians (Fig 1) and is significantly associated with placentation [34]. A primitive form of placentation originated approximately 150 million years ago, during the divergence between placental mammals and egg-laying monotremes [34]. At that time, the epigenetic marks of imprinting appeared in certain genes, and then the early placental lineage between marsupials and eutherians divided. Interestingly, a monoallelic imprinting mechanism is also observed in marsupials, although this mechanism evolved separately and resulted in several differences between the imprinted genes of eutherians and marsupials [35].
Fig 1

Evolution of REM sleep and genomic imprinting.

The timeline (expressed as millions of years ago, MYA) on the horizontal axis maps geological and glacial periods and the evolutionary divergence that occurred among reptiles, birds, and mammals (monotremes, eutherians, and marsupials). The red line delineates the presence of genomic imprinting in therians. A description of REM sleep according to different species is annotated on the right.

The decreased thermoregulation during REM sleep may be related to the thermoregulation that occurs in reptiles. However, a number of studies focusing on the sleep cycles of reptiles and amphibians have failed to identify REM sleep [36,37] or showed little evidence of REM sleep [38,39]. The REM-like sleep patterns that occur in mammals and in a reduced form in birds [40] suggest that this form of sleep evolved independently within the two clades (Fig 1) [41]. Several predictors of the presence of REM sleep across phylogenetic orders have been proposed. For example: the animal's body size, whether it is a prey species, whether it is exposed to unsafe sleeping situations, and whether, soon after birth, the young requires nourishment from the mother (altricial species) or are able to survive on their own (precocial species). Although phylogenetic studies have presented contradictory results with regard to these predictors, in studies of placental and marsupial mammals, all of the predictors of the full aspects of REM sleep have been confirmed [41]. The echidna presents REM-like neuronal activity discharge [41] but lacks the classical behavioural, electrophysiological, and metabolic features of REM sleep [42,43], and these traits supported the initial assertion that REM is absent in monotremes. All species evolved within specific climatic niches [44,45], or a range of temperature and environmental conditions at which species-specific metabolic processes developed. These ecological niches are crucial factors for determining specific traits (e.g., behavioural, physiological, and metabolic traits). In mammals, monotremes are characterized by the lowest body temperatures, whereas marsupials and eutherians are characterized by the highest body temperatures. Moreover, for specific increments in body mass, mammalian body temperatures have been reported to increase, while avian body temperatures have been reported to decrease, which indicates positive and negative scaling, respectively [46]. It is reasonable to speculate that the link between sleep and imprinting developed during the evolutionary process of adaptive radiation, in which speciation occurs because of ecological opportunities. In particular, the evolution of REM sleep physiology may have been biologically consistent with genomic imprinting within a rapidly divergent endothermic lineage (Fig 1).

Evolution of REM sleep and genomic imprinting.

The timeline (expressed as millions of years ago, MYA) on the horizontal axis maps geological and glacial periods and the evolutionary divergence that occurred among reptiles, birds, and mammals (monotremes, eutherians, and marsupials). The red line delineates the presence of genomic imprinting in therians. A description of REM sleep according to different species is annotated on the right. The investigation of genomic imprinting effects in sleep has produced intriguing results that suggest important connections between imprinting and sleep in evolutionary processes. However, more imprinted genes need to be investigated. Genomic imprinting may serve as a novel experimental and theoretical model to assess the function of sleep; nevertheless, there is insufficient information at the moment to interpret the actual results into different theories about the origin of imprinting. The “genomic imprinting hypothesis of sleep” remains in its infancy, and several aspects require attention and further investigation. For example, we recently demonstrated that parent-of-origin effects are important in homeostatic responses to sleep loss [47]. However, if genomic imprinting, which provides a monoallelic mechanism for a small subset of genes, is important for sleep, then it must be clarified why specific parent-of-origin regulatory processes are required rather than a random allelic inactivation process (see Box 3).

Box 3. Parent-of-Origin Effects and Sleep

The homeostatic process of sleep, which is classically triggered by sleep deprivation, is measured as a rebound effect of electrophysiological parameters and gene expression changes following sleep loss. By studying the reciprocal crosses of two mouse strains that differ in their homeostatic response to sleep deprivation (the AKR/J and DBA/2J lines), we observed differences in gene expression [47]. AKR/J mice show a significant rebound after six hours of sleep deprivation, whereas DBA/2J mice show only a mild response following sleep deprivation. Following sleep deprivation, AKR/J mice display a higher rebound in core circadian clock genes, including Bmal1, Clock, Cry1, Cry2, Per1, and Per2, relative to DBA/2J mice. Interestingly, we observed a different sleep rebound level in reciprocal heterozygous F1 mice, and certain clock genes were differentially expressed between the two F1 cohorts. To date, nine differentially regulated genes have been identified in AKR/JxDBA/2J sleep-deprived F1 mice and seven differentially regulated genes have been identified in DBA/2JxAKR/J sleep-deprived F1r mice. In this investigation, we identified specific upstream mechanisms of regulation involving signalling pathways (i.e., DICER1, PKA), growth factors (CSF3 and BDNF), and transcriptional regulators (EGR2 and ELK4) that were modulated by parental effects. Sleep is the most substantial state during development (i.e., it occupies two-thirds of the day in newborns) and plays a fundamental role in developmental processes; furthermore, genomic imprinting is crucial for growth, development, and neurogenesis [10,48]. Therefore, investigations focusing on the interplay between sleep and specific developmental genomic imprinting mechanisms may reveal important new avenues for investigating the neurodevelopmental mechanisms of sleep.
  46 in total

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Authors:  Weston T Powell; Janine M LaSalle
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2015-06-23       Impact factor: 6.150

Review 3.  Post-natal imprinting: evidence from marsupials.

Authors:  J M Stringer; A J Pask; G Shaw; M B Renfree
Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)       Date:  2014-03-05       Impact factor: 3.821

Review 4.  Sleep and the price of plasticity: from synaptic and cellular homeostasis to memory consolidation and integration.

Authors:  Giulio Tononi; Chiara Cirelli
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2014-01-08       Impact factor: 17.173

5.  Effects of a low dose of melatonin on sleep in children with Angelman syndrome.

Authors:  I V Zhdanova; R J Wurtman; J Wagstaff
Journal:  J Pediatr Endocrinol Metab       Date:  1999 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 1.634

Review 6.  How sleep and wakefulness influence circadian rhythmicity: effects of insufficient and mistimed sleep on the animal and human transcriptome.

Authors:  Simon N Archer; Henrik Oster
Journal:  J Sleep Res       Date:  2015-06-08       Impact factor: 3.981

Review 7.  The role of genomic imprinting in biology and disease: an expanding view.

Authors:  Jo Peters
Journal:  Nat Rev Genet       Date:  2014-06-24       Impact factor: 53.242

Review 8.  Phylogeny and the function of REM sleep.

Authors:  J M Siegel
Journal:  Behav Brain Res       Date:  1995 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 3.352

9.  The genome-wide landscape of DNA methylation and hydroxymethylation in response to sleep deprivation impacts on synaptic plasticity genes.

Authors:  R Massart; M Freyburger; M Suderman; J Paquet; J El Helou; E Belanger-Nelson; A Rachalski; O C Koumar; J Carrier; M Szyf; V Mongrain
Journal:  Transl Psychiatry       Date:  2014-01-21       Impact factor: 6.222

10.  The E3 ubiquitin ligase UBE3A is an integral component of the molecular circadian clock through regulating the BMAL1 transcription factor.

Authors:  Nicole C Gossan; Feng Zhang; Baoqiang Guo; Ding Jin; Hikari Yoshitane; Aiyu Yao; Nick Glossop; Yong Q Zhang; Yoshitaka Fukada; Qing-Jun Meng
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2014-04-11       Impact factor: 16.971

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  11 in total

1.  Loss of Snord116 impacts lateral hypothalamus, sleep, and food-related behaviors.

Authors:  Marta Pace; Matteo Falappa; Andrea Freschi; Edoardo Balzani; Chiara Berteotti; Viviana Lo Martire; Fatemeh Kaveh; Eivind Hovig; Giovanna Zoccoli; Roberto Amici; Matteo Cerri; Alfonso Urbanucci; Valter Tucci
Journal:  JCI Insight       Date:  2020-06-18

2.  Combining Human Epigenetics and Sleep Studies in Caenorhabditis elegans: A Cross-Species Approach for Finding Conserved Genes Regulating Sleep.

Authors:  Huiyan Huang; Yong Zhu; Melissa N Eliot; Valerie S Knopik; John E McGeary; Mary A Carskadon; Anne C Hart
Journal:  Sleep       Date:  2017-06-01       Impact factor: 5.849

3.  Imprinting effects of UBE3A loss on synaptic gene networks and Wnt signaling pathways.

Authors:  S Jesse Lopez; Benjamin I Laufer; Ulrika Beitnere; Elizabeth L Berg; Jill L Silverman; Henriette O'Geen; David J Segal; Janine M LaSalle
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2019-11-15       Impact factor: 6.150

Review 4.  New subtypes of allele-specific epigenetic effects: implications for brain development, function and disease.

Authors:  Stephanie N Kravitz; Christopher Gregg
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2019-05-30       Impact factor: 7.070

5.  Genome-wide association analysis of insomnia complaints identifies risk genes and genetic overlap with psychiatric and metabolic traits.

Authors:  Anke R Hammerschlag; Sven Stringer; Christiaan A de Leeuw; Suzanne Sniekers; Erdogan Taskesen; Kyoko Watanabe; Tessa F Blanken; Kim Dekker; Bart H W Te Lindert; Rick Wassing; Ingileif Jonsdottir; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Hreinn Stefansson; Thorarinn Gislason; Klaus Berger; Barbara Schormair; Juergen Wellmann; Juliane Winkelmann; Kari Stefansson; Konrad Oexle; Eus J W Van Someren; Danielle Posthuma
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2017-06-12       Impact factor: 38.330

Review 6.  Baby food and bedtime: Evidence for opposite phenotypes from different genetic and epigenetic alterations in Prader-Willi and Angelman syndromes.

Authors:  Iiro Ilmari Salminen; Bernard J Crespi; Mikael Mokkonen
Journal:  SAGE Open Med       Date:  2019-01-28

7.  The social evolution of sleep: sex differences, intragenomic conflicts and clinical pathologies.

Authors:  Gonçalo S Faria; Susana A M Varela; Andy Gardner
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2019-01-16       Impact factor: 5.349

8.  Working-for-Food Behaviors: A Preclinical Study in Prader-Willi Mutant Mice.

Authors:  Glenda Lassi; Silvia Maggi; Edoardo Balzani; Ilaria Cosentini; Celina Garcia-Garcia; Valter Tucci
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2016-09-26       Impact factor: 4.562

9.  Snord116-dependent diurnal rhythm of DNA methylation in mouse cortex.

Authors:  Rochelle L Coulson; Dag H Yasui; Keith W Dunaway; Benjamin I Laufer; Annie Vogel Ciernia; Yihui Zhu; Charles E Mordaunt; Theresa S Totah; Janine M LaSalle
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-04-24       Impact factor: 14.919

Review 10.  UBE3A: An E3 Ubiquitin Ligase With Genome-Wide Impact in Neurodevelopmental Disease.

Authors:  Simon Jesse Lopez; David J Segal; Janine M LaSalle
Journal:  Front Mol Neurosci       Date:  2019-01-04       Impact factor: 5.639

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