| Literature DB >> 31273069 |
Weikun Xia1, Jiawei Xu2, Guang Yu1, Guidong Yao3, Kai Xu1, Xueshan Ma3, Nan Zhang3, Bofeng Liu1, Tong Li3, Zili Lin1, Xia Chen4, Lijia Li1, Qiujun Wang1, Dayuan Shi3, Senlin Shi3, Yile Zhang3, Wenyan Song3, Haixia Jin3, Linli Hu3, Zhiqin Bu3, Yang Wang3, Jie Na4, Wei Xie5, Ying-Pu Sun2.
Abstract
Histone modifications regulate gene expression and development. To address how they are reprogrammed in human early development, we investigated key histone marks in human oocytes and early embryos. Unlike that in mouse oocytes, the permissive mark trimethylated histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4me3) largely exhibits canonical patterns at promoters in human oocytes. After fertilization, prezygotic genome activation (pre-ZGA) embryos acquire permissive chromatin and widespread H3K4me3 in CpG-rich regulatory regions. By contrast, the repressive mark H3K27me3 undergoes global depletion. CpG-rich regulatory regions then resolve to either active or repressed states upon ZGA, followed by subsequent restoration of H3K27me3 at developmental genes. Finally, by combining chromatin and transcriptome maps, we revealed transcription circuitry and asymmetric H3K27me3 patterning during early lineage specification. Collectively, our data unveil a priming phase connecting human parental-to-zygotic epigenetic transition.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31273069 DOI: 10.1126/science.aaw5118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728