| Literature DB >> 30400938 |
Yong Lei1,2, Yung-Hsin Huang1,2,3, Margaret A Goodell4,5,6,7.
Abstract
DNA methylation plays important roles in determining cellular identity, disease, and environmental responses, but little is known about the mechanisms that drive methylation changes during cellular differentiation and tumorigenesis. Meanwhile, the causal relationship between DNA methylation and transcription remains incompletely understood. Recently developed targeted DNA methylation manipulation tools can address these gaps in knowledge, leading to new insights into how methylation governs gene expression. Here, we summarize technological developments in the DNA methylation editing field and discuss the remaining challenges facing current tools, as well as potential future directions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30400938 PMCID: PMC6219187 DOI: 10.1186/s13059-018-1566-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Fig. 1The development of targeted DNA methylation and demethylation milestone tools. Not drawn to scale
Fig. 2Current strategies of targeted CpG methylation. a Main strategies of zinc-finger proteins (ZFP) or transcription activator-like effector (TALE)-associated hybrid proteins. Methyltransferase (MTase) can be fused to a ZFP or TALE anchoring platform with or without a linker. Split MTase can be fused to a ZFP or TALE pair to improve binding specificity. b Main strategies for the use of CRISPR-based hybrid proteins. MTase can be fused to dCas9 with or without a linker. Chimeric MTase such as DNMT3A–DNMT3L has been applied to increase methylation. Split MTase (M.SssI) can decrease off-target effects. MTase multimerization approaches (such as dCas9–SunTag) enhance activity for long-range methylation editing
Fig. 3How targeted CpG methylation affects gene expression. a Direct methylation of a promoter to silence expression or to edit a distal element (such as an enhancer) in order to recruit endogenous DNA methyltransferase or histone modification to silence expression. b Targeted CpG methylation at CTCF-binding sites to open CTCF looping and thus activate gene expression. Hollow and black-filled circles indicate unmethylated and methylated CpG sites, respectively. Red lines indicate CTCF-binding sites
Summary table of TALE and CRISPR based targeted methylation tools
| Strategy | Delivery | Efficacy | Duration | Locus | Peak site | Editing | Target | Off-targets | Features | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TALE-DNMT3ACD-3 L | Transfection | 12–15% | 2 days | CDKN2A | n.a. | ~ 700 bp | CpG | At nearby regions (Targeted mePCR) | First TALE-DNMT3 A study (2015) | [ |
| TALE-CIB1; DNMT3A/TET1 CD-C R Y2 | Transfection | ~ 10% | ~ 5 days | Ascl 1 | n.a. | n.a. | CpG | n.a. | Epigenome editing by optogenetics (2017) | [ |
| dCas9-DNMT3ACD | Transfection | ~ 35% | 8 days | BACH2 | −27 bp, + 25 bp | < 100 bp | CpG | Off-targets observed using unspeci_c sgRNAs | First dCas9-DNMT3 A studies (2016) | [ |
| dCas9-DNMT3A | Transduction | ~ 12% | 3 days |
| n.a. | n.a. | CpG | Not detectable (dCas9 ChIP-seq) | Targeted methylation alters CTCF looping and local genes expression (2016) | [ |
| TALE/dCas9-KRAB, DNMT3ACD, DNMT3L | Transduction | ~ 80% | 30 days |
| n.a. | ~ 3 kb | CpG | Not detectable (MeDIP-seq) | Inheritable silencing of endogenous genes (2016) | [ |
| dCas9-DNMT3ACD-3 L | Transfection | ~ 30% | 5 days |
| −40 bp, + 25 bp | ~ 800 bp | CpG | Mild off-target observed | More e_cient than dCas9- DNMT3ACD (2016) | [ |
| dCas9-Sun Tag-DNMT3A | Transduction | ~ 70% | 30 days |
| n.a. | ~ 4.5 kb | CpG (CpH) | Not detectable (RRBS; WGBS) | Long range methylation Non-CpG methylation (2017) | [ |
| dCas9-Sun Tag-DNMT3ACD | Transfection | ~ 15% | 4 days |
| n.a. | n.a. | CpG | Not detectable (TSC-bs-seq) | Modular Sun Tag- DNMT3ACD reduces off-target events (2018) | [ |
| dCas9-MQ1 147 | Transfection | *60% | 24 h |
| −24-26 bp | n.a. | CpG | Not detectable (RRBS) | In vivo application using | [ |
| dCas9-split M.SssI | Transfection | *50% | 2 days |
| −22-23 bp | 8–25 bp | CpG | Not detectable (Targeted mePCR) | Split catalytic domain for | [ |
*Maximum DN A methylation at a CpG
Summary table of TALE and CRISPR based targeted demethylation tools
| Strategy | Delivery | Efficacy | Duration | Locus | Peak site | Editing range | Target | Off-targets | Highlights | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TALE-TET1CD, TALE-TET1 | Transfection | ~ 15% | 4 days |
| n.a. | n.a. | CpG | Off-targets from unspeci_c binding | First TALE-TE T study (2013) | [ |
| dCas9-TET1CD | Transfection | ~ 15% | 24 h |
| n.a. | n.a. | CpG | Not detectable in LINE1 elements | First dCas9-TE T study (2016) | [ |
| dCas9-TET1CD, MS2-TET1CD | Transfection | ~ 15% | 4 days |
| n.a. | ~ 500 bp by multi-sgRNAs | CpG | Not detectable at sgRN A similar sites | MS2 coated sgRNA (2016) | [ |
| dCas-TET1CD | Transduction | ~ 26% | 3 days |
| n.a. | n.a. | CpG | Minimal o ff-target on methylation and expression using dCas9-ChIP-BS-seq and RNA-seq | Induce an active chromatin status for promote r. | [ |
| dCas9-Sun Tag-TET1CD | Transfection | ~ 80% | 2 days |
| n.a. | 200–1000 bp | CpG | Not detectable (WGBS; RNA-seq) | Long range demethylation. | [ |
| Gal4-ROS1 CD | Transfection | n.a. | 2 days | Reporter plasmid | n.a. | n.a. | CpG | n.a. | Direct removal of 5mC without hydroxymethylation (2017) | [ |