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Newly Discovered Process Shows How DNA Changes Print E-mail
SciMed - Genetics & Genome
TS-Si News Service   
Monday, 18 April 2011 15:00
Baltimore, MD, USA. Research into potential treatment methods for epigenetic abnormalities has uncovered a mechanism that alters DNA and forces crucial chemical changes that directly affect the expression of the genes.

While DNA is the stable building block of an individual's genome, a research team identified a process sequence involving a previously unknown step and two molecules for DNA to change from a methylated to demethylated state.


Hongjun Song, Ph.D., says "Anything we can learn from these studies about how to manipulate the process of changing DNA methylation status is going to have implications for human development and disease, including cancer and degenerative disorders." Song is professor of neurology and neuroscience and director of the Stem Cell Program in the Institute for Cell Engineering, the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

Research Application

Both methylation and demethylation have long been linked to genetic alterations and disease.

The authors say that "This new knowledge gives us an entry point to someday manipulating this fundamentally important process for treating patients with diseases associated with epigenetic abnormality."

The latter can include a wide range of cancers, psychiatric disorders and neurodegenerative diseases.

The process may also be involved in learning and memory, the researchers say.

However, the basic mechanisms involved may have even wider applicability, providing important clues on the various ways standard gene expression can be altered.
The research team from Hopkins used human kidney cells and brain tissue from adult mice to show how the presence or absence of a methyl group at specific locations can chemically alter the DNA and change the expression of the genes. Their report appears in the journal Cell.

Their first step was to use human kidney cells in a dish, focusing their investigation on a tiny region of DNA in the cells' nuclei, specifically watching the actions of one particular chemical base known as cytosine (C).

The team added different chemicals to force methylation changes and after watching the fate of methylated cytosine (mC) for two days, and noting that nothing had changed, they then added a protein called TET1 to the cell. As a result, some of the mC became hydroxylmethylated (hmC) and some reverted to plain C, indicating loss of the methyl-group from C in the DNA.

"What this told us was TET1 promotes this process of DNA changing status from methylated to demethylated," Song says. While only about five percent of human cells progress from hmC to C under natural conditions, the researchers found they could enhance the demethylation process by adding another protein called Apobec1.

"That suggested another clear step in DNA demethylation," Song says. "Cells go from mC to hmC by TET1, and then from hmC to C involving Apobec 1."

Next, they followed up on their own previously published work showing that electrical stimulation like that used in electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) resulted in increased brain cell growth in mice, which likely was an effect of changes in DNA methylation status. The researchers used a genetic tool and PCR-based approach to amplify a tiny region of the genome in dozens of mice, some exposed to ECT-like electrical stimulation and some not, to compare the status of cytosine at similar stretches of DNA in brain tissue.

By using genetic sequencing technology to analyze the various states of methylation – simple C, methylated C, or hydroxylmethlyated Cs – in the specific reigons of DNA from brain cells of ECT-exposed mice versus other animals, they found evidence that ECT indeed induces DNA demethylation and identified TET1 as a critical factor for this to happen.

"By identifying two molecules and tying together two pathways needed for DNA methylation status to change, we believe we have shown a unified mechanism that regulates DNA as it goes from a methylated state to a demethylated state," Song says.

FundingSupport for this research came from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Johns Hopkins Brain Science Institute (BSi), National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression (NARSAD), and the Adelson Medical Research Foundation (AMRF).
CitationHydroxylation of 5-Methylcytosine by TET1 Promotes Active DNA Demethylation in the Adult Brain. Junjie U. Guo, Yijing Su, Chun Zhong, Guo-li Ming, Hongjun Song. Cell 2011; doi:10.1016/j.cell.2011.03.022

Abstract

• 5mC hydroxylation promotes active DNA demethylation irrespective of CpG context
• Deamination and base excision repair are involved in 5hmC demethylation
• 5hmC demethylation is highly processive, transcription dependent, and strand biased
• Tet1 and Apobec1 regulate activity-induced DNA demethylation in the mouse brain

Abstract

Cytosine methylation is the major covalent modification of mammalian genomic DNA and plays important roles in transcriptional regulation. The molecular mechanism underlying the enzymatic removal of this epigenetic mark, however, remains elusive. Here, we show that 5-methylcytosine (5mC) hydroxylase TET1, by converting 5mCs to 5-hydroxymethylcytosines (5hmCs), promotes DNA demethylation in mammalian cells through a process that requires the base excision repair pathway. Though expression of the 12 known human DNA glycosylases individually did not enhance removal of 5hmCs in mammalian cells, demethylation of both exogenously introduced and endogenous 5hmCs is promoted by the AID (activation-induced deaminase)/APOBEC (apolipoprotein B mRNA-editing enzyme complex) family of cytidine deaminases. Furthermore, Tet1 and Apobec1 are involved in neuronal activity-induced, region-specific, active DNA demethylation and subsequent gene expression in the dentate gyrus of the adult mouse brain in vivo. Our study suggests a TET1-induced oxidation-deamination mechanism for active DNA demethylation in mammals.

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TS-Si is dedicated to the acceptance, medical treatment, and legal protection of individuals correcting the misalignment of their brains and their anatomical sex, while supporting their transition into society as hormonally reconstituted and surgically corrected citizens.

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Last Updated on Sunday, 17 April 2011 20:36
 
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