Publication | Open Access
Dynamic hydroxymethylation of deoxyribonucleic acid marks differentiation-associated enhancers
176
Citations
64
References
2012
Year
Histone ModificationsEpigenetic ChangeGeneticsDna MethylationMolecular BiologyEpigeneticsTranscriptional RegulationDynamic HydroxymethylationMetabolic SignalingMolecular SignalingAdipose TissueGene ExpressionEpigenetic RegulationCell BiologyChromatin FunctionChromatinDevelopmental BiologyChromatin StructureHistone Variant DepositionNatural SciencesEpigenomicsGene RegulationMetabolic RegulationMedicineCell Development
Enhancers are developmentally controlled transcriptional regulatory regions whose activities are modulated through histone modifications or histone variant deposition. In this study, we show by genome-wide mapping that the newly discovered deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) modification 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) is dynamically associated with transcription factor binding to distal regulatory sites during neural differentiation of mouse P19 cells and during adipocyte differentiation of mouse 3T3-L1 cells. Functional annotation reveals that regions gaining 5hmC are associated with genes expressed either in neural tissues when P19 cells undergo neural differentiation or in adipose tissue when 3T3-L1 cells undergo adipocyte differentiation. Furthermore, distal regions gaining 5hmC together with H3K4me2 and H3K27ac in P19 cells behave as differentiation-dependent transcriptional enhancers. Identified regions are enriched in motifs for transcription factors regulating specific cell fates such as Meis1 in P19 cells and PPARγ in 3T3-L1 cells. Accordingly, a fraction of hydroxymethylated Meis1 sites were associated with a dynamic engagement of the 5-methylcytosine hydroxylase Tet1. In addition, kinetic studies of cytosine hydroxymethylation of selected enhancers indicated that DNA hydroxymethylation is an early event of enhancer activation. Hence, acquisition of 5hmC in cell-specific distal regulatory regions may represent a major event of enhancer progression toward an active state and participate in selective activation of tissue-specific genes.
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