| Literature DB >> 29237414 |
Helen McCormick1,2, Paul E Young1, Suzy S J Hur1, Keith Booher3, Hunter Chung3, Jennifer E Cropley1,2, Eleni Giannoulatou4,5, Catherine M Suter6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cytosine methylation is a stable epigenetic modification of DNA that plays an important role in both normal physiology and disease. Most diseases exhibit some degree of sexual dimorphism, but the extent to which epigenetic states are influenced by sex is understudied and poorly understood. To address this deficit we studied DNA methylation patterns across multiple reduced representation bisulphite sequencing datasets (from liver, heart, brain, muscle and spleen) derived from isogenic male and female mice.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; Epigenetics; Gender; RRBS; Sexual dimorphism; Tissue-specific methylation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29237414 PMCID: PMC5729250 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-017-4350-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1Autosomal DNA methylation patterns in the liver distinguish gender. a Dendrogram showing results of unsupervised hierarchical clustering of liver RRBS data from six males and six females with sex chromosomes excluded. b, c Pseudo-3D principal component analysis (PCA) plots of the first three principal components of liver RRBS data as in (a) with sex chromosome data included (b), or removed (c); males are shown in blue, females in red. d Clustered heat map of differentially methylated tiles (DMTs) identified in the liver of males versus females. e CpG island (top) and genomic annotation (bottom) of CpG tiles present in all liver RRBS data (left) and gender DMTs (right)
Fig. 2Gender-specific methylation in the liver does not require testosterone. a Venn diagram showing overlap of gender DMTs in the liver identified by this study and our reanalysis of Reizel et al. [9]. b Bar plot of gender DMTs from our liver RRBS data showing % of tiles hypermethylated in females (red) and males (blue) across all autosomes. c Bar plot of gender DMTs between normal females and castrated males showing % of tiles hypermethylated in females (red) and males (blue) across all autosomes. d Venn diagram showing overlap of all liver gender DMTs (both those identified here and those from Reizel et al. [9]) and testosterone independent DMTs (i.e. differentially methylated between normal females and castrated males)
Fig. 3Mouse heart and brain also harbour gender-specific methylation. a, b Pseudo-3D PCA plots of the first three principal components of RRBS data from brain (a) and heart (b); males are shown in blue, females in red. c, d Heat maps of differentially methylated tiles (DMTs) identified in the brain (c) and heart (d) of males versus females. e Genomic annotations of brain and heart gender DMTs. f, g Bar plot of gender DMTs from brain (f) and heart (g) showing % of tiles hypermethylated in females (in red) and males (blue) across all autosomes
Fig. 4Gender DMTs are largely tissue autonomous. a Venn diagram showing overlap of gender DMTs from liver, brain and heart. b Molecular functions overrepresented by regions harbouring gender DMTs in liver, brain and heart. c Pseudo-3D PCA plot of RRBS data from liver (green), brain (blue) and heart (red). d Venn diagram showing overlap of gender DMTs from spleen, heart, skeletal muscle and liver