| Literature DB >> 27446199 |
Anne K Ludwig1, Peng Zhang1, M C Cardoso1.
Abstract
Cytosine base modifications in mammals underwent a recent expansion with the addition of several naturally occurring further modifications of methylcytosine in the last years. This expansion was accompanied by the identification of the respective enzymes and proteins reading and translating the different modifications into chromatin higher order organization as well as genome activity and stability, leading to the hypothesis of a cytosine code. Here, we summarize the current state-of-the-art on DNA modifications, the enzyme families setting the cytosine modifications and the protein families reading and translating the different modifications with emphasis on the mouse protein homologs. Throughout this review, we focus on functional and mechanistic studies performed on mammalian cells, corresponding mouse models and associated human diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Dnmt; MBD; Tet; cytosine modifications; epigenetics; hydroxymethylcytosine; methylcytosine; mouse models
Year: 2016 PMID: 27446199 PMCID: PMC4914596 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2016.00115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Phenotypes of initial Dnmt knockout mouse models.
| Genotype | Phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Homozygous knockout | ||
| Knockout mice developed to term and appeared to be normal at birth but most of homozygous mutant mice became runted and died at about 4 weeks of age | ||
| No viable | ||
| Mice homozygous for this | ||
| Disruption of |
Phenotypes of initial Tet knockout mouse models.
| Genotype | Phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Mice are viable, fertile, and grossly normal though some mutant mice have a slightly smaller body size at birth | ||
| Animals exhibited abnormal hippocampal long-term depression and impaired memory extinction | ||
| Approximately one-third of | ||
| Female mice depleted of | ||
| Double deficient mice had reduced 5hmC and increase 5mC levels and abnormal methylation at various imprinted loci. Animals of both sexes were fertile with females having smaller ovaries and reduced fertility |
Phenotype of initial MBP-deficient mouse models.
| Genotype | Phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Rett syndrome-like phenotype. Between 3 and 5 weeks: uncoordinated gait, reduced spontaneous movement, hind limb clasping, irregular breathing, misaligned jaws, uneven wearing of teeth, reduced brain weight, and neuronal cell size. Between 6 and 12 weeks: rapid weight loss and death. | ||
| Viable and fertile. Impaired spatial learning, decreased neurogenesis, reduced long-term potentiation, decreased genomic stability. | ||
| Viable, fertile. Maternal nurturing defects: reduced litter size and weight of pups. | ||
| Early embryonic lethality | ||
| Viable and fertile. Increased number of C:G to T:A transitions at CpG sites. | ||
| Viable and fertile. Reduced tumorigenesis | ||
| Early gestational lethality. Developmental arrest shortly after gastrulation. | ||
| Phenotype not described. |
Comparison of human proteins and their mouse orthologs.
| Mouse protein | Human protein | Amino acid similarity (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Dnmt1 (1620 aa) | DNMT1 (1632 aa) | 76 |
| Dnmt2 (415 aa) | DNMT2 (391 aa) | 77 |
| Dnmt3a (908 aa) | DNMT3A (912 aa) | 96 |
| Dnmt3b (860 aa) | DNMT3B (853 aa) | 80 |
| Dnmt3l (421 aa) | DNMT3L (387 aa) | 56 |
| Tet1 (2039 aa) | TET1 (2136 aa) | 50 |
| Tet2 (1912 aa) | TET2 (2002 aa) | 55 |
| Tet3 (1803 aa) | TET3 (1795 aa) | 89 |
| Mecp2 (501 aa) | MECP2 (498 aa) | 94 |
| Mbd1 (636 aa) | MBD1 (605 aa) | 68 |
| Mbd2 (414 aa) | MBD2 (411 aa) | 94 |
| Mbd3 (285 aa) | MBD3 (291 aa) | 92 |
| Mbd4 (554 aa) | MBD4 (580 aa) | 58 |
| Kaiso (671 aa) | KAISO (672 aa) | 84 |
| Zbtb4 (982 aa) | ZBTB4 (1013 aa) | 85 |
| Zbtb38 (1197 aa) | ZBTB38 (1195 aa) | 81 |
| Np95 (782 aa) | ICBP90 (806 aa) | 72 |
| Np97 (803 aa) | NIRF (802 aa) | 90 |
Summary of disease-related DNMT and TET mutations.
| Protein | Disease | Alteration | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| DNMT1 | Hereditary sensory autonomic neuropathy with dementia and hearing loss (HSAN1E) | Y495C, Y495H, D490E-P491Y | |
| DNMT1 | Autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia, deafness and narcolepsy (ADCA-DN) | A570V, G605A, and V606F | |
| DNMT3A | Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) | R882 and frameshift, nonsense and splice site mutations | |
| DNMT3A | Overgrowth syndrome | Mutations interfere with domain–domain interactions and histone binding | |
| DNMT3B | Immunodeficiency, centromeric region instability, facial anomalies syndrome (ICF) syndrome | Mutations in catalytic domain | |
| TET1 | AML | Ten-eleven translocation that gives rise to a MLL-TET1 fusion | |
| TET2 | AML, MDS, and myeloproliferative neoplasms | Mutations mostly in catalytic domain |
Summary of disease-related MBP alterations.
| Protein | Disease | Alteration | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| MECP2 | Rett syndrome | Causal MECP2 mutations of Rett syndrome are summarized in: | |
| MBD1 | Prostate cancer | Upregulated | |
| MBD2 | Breast cancer | Upregulated | |
| MBD3 | Glioblastoma | Upregulated | |
| MBD4 | Colorectal cancer | Frameshift mutation | |
| KAISO | Colorectal cancer | Upregulated | |
| ZBTB4 | Neuroblastoma | Downregulated | |
| ICBP90 | Non-small-cell lung cancer | Upregulated | |
| NIRF | Lung cancer | Upregulated |