| Literature DB >> 27507241 |
Xin Liu1,2,3, Peng Zhou4,5, Fan Fan1,2,3, Dan Li3, Jihong Wu1,3, Yi Lu1,2,3, Yi Luo6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Age-related cataract (ARC) is the leading cause of visual impairment worldwide, and α-crystallin (CRYAA) is the predominant structural protein involved in the maintenance of lens clarity and refractive properties. We previously demonstrated that CRYAA genes undergo epigenetic repression in the lens epithelia in ARC. We further analyze the underlying mechanism in the current study.Entities:
Keywords: CRYAA; DNA methylation; Human lens epithelial cells; Transcription factor Sp1; Zebularine
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27507241 PMCID: PMC4979130 DOI: 10.1186/s12886-016-0309-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ophthalmol ISSN: 1471-2415 Impact factor: 2.209
Fig. 1Transcription factor binding sites Prediction. The sequence around the CpG site, which displays the most significant differences in methylation between nuclear ARC cases and controls, is analyzed for transcription factor binding prediction via TESS website. a Several transcription factor-binding sites are predicted in the sequence. The most frequent predicted transcription factor is Sp1. b Transcription factor binding in seleted sequence. We shorten the sequence and select one, which mainly binds to Sp1 for further study. c Transcription factor binding in mutated sequence. If the “cg” site mutate to “ag” site, no transcription factor binding is found
Fig. 2CpG methylation of CRYAA promoter decreases the DNA-binding capacity of transcription factor SP-1. EMSA experiments show the specific binding of Sp1 to the binding sequence of the CRYAA promoter. Lane 1: biotin-labeled wild-type Sp1 probe incubated with HLE B-3 nuclear extracts. Sp1 binding is depicted by arrows on the left of the figures. Lane 2: excess unlabeled wild-type competitor (1:100) competes for binding with the labeled probe. Lane 3: unlabeled methylated competitor (1:100) does not compete with the labeled probe. Lane 4: labeled methylated probe incubates with nuclear extracts. No binding was shown. Lanes 5 and 6: excess unlabeled wild-type and methylated competitors (1:100) were added, respectively. No binding of Sp1 was shown. Lane 7 shows anti-Sp1 supershift. Anti-Sp1 antibody is added to nuclear extracts incubating with a wild-type probe. Lane 8 shows no binding of Sp1. Anti-Sp1 antibody is added to nuclear extracts incubating with a methylated probe
Fig. 3Demethylation agent Zebularine increased CRYAA mRNA expression in HLE B-3 cells detected by Real time qRT-PCR. A. Zebularine increased CRYAA mRNA expression in a dose-dependent pattern. As the concentration of zebularine increased from 10 μM to 200 μM, the CRYAA mRNA level increased to 4.5 fold of untreated controls after zebularine treatment for 24 h, 25.6 fold for 48 h and 42.0 fold for 72 h. B. Zebularine also increased CRYAA mRNA expression in a time-dependent pattern. After 24 to 72 h with zebularine treatment of different concentrations, the CRYAA mRNA expression level increased to 3.4 fold of the control level in 10 μM concentration, 15.6 fold in 20 μM, 29.1 fold in 50 μM, 78.8 fold in 100 μM and 147.3 fold in 200 μM. *P < 0.05. The error bars represent standard deviation of the mean of 3 experiments
Fig. 4Schematic illustration of the mechanism of DNA methylation of CRYAA in nuclear ARC. Under normal condition, only a few CpG sites are methylated, DNA binds to transcription factors, and CRYAA gene transcription is normal. With aging, the CpG sites of the CRYAA promoter become hypermethylated. Transcription factors, especially Sp1, cannot bind to DNA sequences. Therefore, gene transcription and expression are down-regulated. These procedures are reversible via the DNA demethylation agent Zebularine