| Literature DB >> 30764754 |
Sylvaine Renault1,2, Murielle Genty3,4, Alison Gabori3, Catherine Boisneau5, Charles Esnault3, Thomas Dugé de Bernonville6, Corinne Augé-Gouillou3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Both classes of transposable elements (DNA and RNA) are tightly regulated at the transcriptional level leading to the inactivation of transposition via epigenetic mechanisms. Due to the high copies number of these elements, the hypothesis has emerged that their regulation can coordinate a regulatory network of genes. Herein, we investigated whether transposition regulation of HsMar1, a human DNA transposon, differs in presence or absence of endogenous HsMar1 copies. In the case where HsMar1 transposition is regulated, the number of repetitive DNA sequences issued by HsMar1 and distributed in the human genome makes HsMar1 a good candidate to regulate neighboring gene expression by epigenetic mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: Epigenetic; Mobile DNA; Network; Transposon
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30764754 PMCID: PMC6375154 DOI: 10.1186/s12863-019-0719-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genet ISSN: 1471-2156 Impact factor: 2.797
Fig. 1HsMar1 excision in two genetic backgrounds: human (HeLa cells) and non-human (CHO cells). a HsMar1 excision cassette before (top) and after (down) the expected HsMar1 excision. PiggyBac (PB) TIRs are represented as blue arrows ending the cassette; the HsMar1 recombinant copy is drawn in orange with its 5′ and 3’TIRs (orange arrows) and its transposase (Tpase) (orange rectangle); the LoxP recombination sites of CRE recombinase are in grey and GFP in green. The three promoters (pCMV, endogenous HsMar1 and that driving the puromycin resistance gene) are shown as thin arrows coloured in green, orange and grey respectively. b Excision assays exemplified for two cell lines (HeLa-D2 and CHO-A6). HeLa or CHO were transfected with HSMAR-RA (150 or 1050 ng), CRE (150 ng) expressing plasmid or an empty plasmid (pCS2). Transfection efficiency is controlled by transfecting a GFP expressing plasmid. 48 h after transfection, excision is controlled by GFP expression. c RT-PCR analyses of recombinant cell lines (for HeLa: B3, D2 and D4, left panel and for CHO: A6, A8 and B4, right panel) and their respective empty cell lines (no Tpase). BET-stained agarose gels are shown. Bands detected in HeLa cells are a mixed of PCR products obtained from both endogenous and recombinant HsMar1 copies. d Excision sites amplification in recombinant HeLa-D2 and CHO-A6 cell lines 48 h post- transfection; the different expressing plasmids use to promote excision are indicated above and amounts are as in (B) (pCS2: control plasmid). BET-stained agarose gels of PCR products are shown. The expected band is pinpointed (left margin)
Number of independent HsMar1 transgenic cell lines (HeLa and CHO) showing excision according to different conditions of transfection
| Hsmar1 transgenic cells lines | Excision after transfection with | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No DNA | pCS2 | CRE | HSMAR-RA | ||
| HeLa | 22 | 0 | 0 | 8 | 0 |
| CHO | 8 | 7 | 8 | 8 | 8 |
Percentage of cells per cell line (HeLa or CHO) showing excision according to different conditions of transfection
| No DNA | pCS2 | CRE | HSMAR-RA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HeLa | 0 | 0 | 1% | 0 |
| CHO | 0–22% | 0.8–30% | 8–100% | 6–50% |
Fig. 2a Bisulfite conversion analysis of the HsMar1 cassette present in recombinant HeLa and CHO cell lines. Bold black lines indicate the three analysed regions (pCMV, GFP and HsMar1). Three transgenic lines were analysed for methylation for each cells lines and the compilation of the results is presented: one round corresponds to a dinucleotide CpG present in the analysed fragment (black: mCpG; white: CpG). b Level of H3K4me3 or H3K9me3 relative to total histone H3 on different sequences: EIF4α, TAF7, GFP and pCMV present in excision cassette in two cell lines HeLa-D2 and CHO-A6. Histone marks present on GAPDH were used as references for comparison and expressed as relative mark deposition to GAPDH. H3K4me3 deposition is in light grey and H3K9me3 deposition in dark grey
Fig. 3a Percentage of methylated MspI sites (mCpG) over all MspI sites within 0.2 kb intervals around TIRs present inside (TIRs in, red) or outside genes (TIRs out, blue) or random 30 bp sequences (green). b Percentage of HsMar1 containing mCpG present inside (HsMar1 in) or outside genes (HsMar1 out). c Percentage of mCpG over all CpG within 0.2 kb intervals around HsMar1 present inside (HsMar1 in) or outside genes (HsMar1 out) or random genes. d mCpG for SETMAR. The arrow represents the 3’ TIR present in SETMAR
Fig. 4a Percentage of HsTIRs and random 30 bp sequences associated to H3K4me3 (blue) and H3K9me3 (red) in HeLa-S3 cells. b Percentage of 30 pb TIRs present inside or outside genes or random 30 bp sequences associated to H3K4me3 (blue) and H3K9me3 (red) in HeLa-S3 cells. c Percentage of H3K4me3 (blue) and H3K9me3 (red) marks in 2-kb intervals spanning a 40-kb window around HsTIR sequences (position “zero”) in HeLa-S3 cells. d Percentage of HsMar1 (left panel) and random genes (right) associated to H3K4me3 (blue) and H3K9me3 (red) in HeLa-S3 cells. e Percentage of occurrence of H3K4me3 (blue) and H3K9me3 (red) marks in 2-kb intervals spanning a 40-kb window around HsMar1 in HeLa-S3 cells. f H3K4me3 and H3K9me3 status of SETMAR. The blue rectangle corresponds to the position of H3K4me3 in setmar gene