| Literature DB >> 32690947 |
Qiujun Wang1,2, Guang Yu1,2, Xuan Ming3, Weikun Xia1,2, Xiguang Xu4,5, Yu Zhang2, Wenhao Zhang1,2, Yuanyuan Li2, Chunyi Huang2, Hehuang Xie4,5, Bing Zhu6,7, Wei Xie8,9.
Abstract
The epigenome, including DNA methylation, is stably propagated during mitotic division. However, single-cell clonal expansion produces heterogeneous methylomes, thus raising the question of how the DNA methylome remains stable despite constant epigenetic drift. Here, we report that a clonal population of DNA (cytosine-5)-methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1)-only cells produces a heterogeneous methylome, which is robustly propagated on cell expansion and differentiation. Our data show that DNMT1 has imprecise maintenance activity and possibly possesses weak de novo activity, leading to spontaneous 'epimutations'. However, these epimutations tend to be corrected through a neighbor-guided mechanism, which is likely to be enabled by the environment-sensitive de novo activity ('tuner') and maintenance activity ('stabilizer') of DNMT1. By generating base-resolution maps of de novo and maintenance activities, we find that H3K9me2/3-marked regions show enhanced de novo activity, and CpG islands have both poor maintenance and de novo activities. The imprecise epigenetic machinery coupled with neighbor-guided correction may be a fundamental mechanism underlying robust yet flexible epigenetic inheritance.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32690947 DOI: 10.1038/s41588-020-0661-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330