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DNA Hypomethylation in Intragenic and Intergenic Enhancer Chromatin of Muscle-Specific Genes Usually Correlates with their Expression

Tissue-specific enhancers are critical for gene regulation. In this study, we help elucidate the contribution of muscle-associated differential DNA methylation to the enhancer activity of highly muscle-specific genes. By bioinformatic analysis of 44 muscle-associated genes, we show that preferential...

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Autores principales: Ehrlich, Kenneth C., Paterson, Heather L., Lacey, Michelle, Ehrlich, Melanie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: YJBM 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5168824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28018137
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author Ehrlich, Kenneth C.
Paterson, Heather L.
Lacey, Michelle
Ehrlich, Melanie
author_facet Ehrlich, Kenneth C.
Paterson, Heather L.
Lacey, Michelle
Ehrlich, Melanie
author_sort Ehrlich, Kenneth C.
collection PubMed
description Tissue-specific enhancers are critical for gene regulation. In this study, we help elucidate the contribution of muscle-associated differential DNA methylation to the enhancer activity of highly muscle-specific genes. By bioinformatic analysis of 44 muscle-associated genes, we show that preferential gene expression in skeletal muscle (SkM) correlates with SkM-specific intragenic and intergenic enhancer chromatin and overlapping foci of DNA hypomethylation. Some genes, e.g., CASQ1 and FBXO32, displayed broad regions of both SkM- and heart-specific enhancer chromatin but exhibited focal SkM-specific DNA hypomethylation. Half of the genes had SkM-specific super-enhancers. In contrast to simple enhancer/gene-expression correlations, a super-enhancer was associated with the myogenic MYOD1 gene in both SkM and myoblasts even though SkM has < 1 percent as much MYOD1 expression. Local chromatin differences in this super-enhancer probably contribute to the SkM/myoblast differential expression. Transfection assays confirmed the tissue-specificity of the 0.3-kb core enhancer within MYOD1’s super-enhancer and demonstrated its repression by methylation of its three CG dinucleotides. Our study suggests that DNA hypomethylation increases enhancer tissue-specificity and that SkM super-enhancers sometimes are poised for physiologically important, rapid up-regulation.
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spelling pubmed-51688242017-04-07 DNA Hypomethylation in Intragenic and Intergenic Enhancer Chromatin of Muscle-Specific Genes Usually Correlates with their Expression Ehrlich, Kenneth C. Paterson, Heather L. Lacey, Michelle Ehrlich, Melanie Yale J Biol Med Original Contribution Tissue-specific enhancers are critical for gene regulation. In this study, we help elucidate the contribution of muscle-associated differential DNA methylation to the enhancer activity of highly muscle-specific genes. By bioinformatic analysis of 44 muscle-associated genes, we show that preferential gene expression in skeletal muscle (SkM) correlates with SkM-specific intragenic and intergenic enhancer chromatin and overlapping foci of DNA hypomethylation. Some genes, e.g., CASQ1 and FBXO32, displayed broad regions of both SkM- and heart-specific enhancer chromatin but exhibited focal SkM-specific DNA hypomethylation. Half of the genes had SkM-specific super-enhancers. In contrast to simple enhancer/gene-expression correlations, a super-enhancer was associated with the myogenic MYOD1 gene in both SkM and myoblasts even though SkM has < 1 percent as much MYOD1 expression. Local chromatin differences in this super-enhancer probably contribute to the SkM/myoblast differential expression. Transfection assays confirmed the tissue-specificity of the 0.3-kb core enhancer within MYOD1’s super-enhancer and demonstrated its repression by methylation of its three CG dinucleotides. Our study suggests that DNA hypomethylation increases enhancer tissue-specificity and that SkM super-enhancers sometimes are poised for physiologically important, rapid up-regulation. YJBM 2016-12-23 /pmc/articles/PMC5168824/ /pubmed/28018137 Text en Copyright ©2016, Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons CC BY-NC license, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. You may not use the material for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Original Contribution
Ehrlich, Kenneth C.
Paterson, Heather L.
Lacey, Michelle
Ehrlich, Melanie
DNA Hypomethylation in Intragenic and Intergenic Enhancer Chromatin of Muscle-Specific Genes Usually Correlates with their Expression
title DNA Hypomethylation in Intragenic and Intergenic Enhancer Chromatin of Muscle-Specific Genes Usually Correlates with their Expression
title_full DNA Hypomethylation in Intragenic and Intergenic Enhancer Chromatin of Muscle-Specific Genes Usually Correlates with their Expression
title_fullStr DNA Hypomethylation in Intragenic and Intergenic Enhancer Chromatin of Muscle-Specific Genes Usually Correlates with their Expression
title_full_unstemmed DNA Hypomethylation in Intragenic and Intergenic Enhancer Chromatin of Muscle-Specific Genes Usually Correlates with their Expression
title_short DNA Hypomethylation in Intragenic and Intergenic Enhancer Chromatin of Muscle-Specific Genes Usually Correlates with their Expression
title_sort dna hypomethylation in intragenic and intergenic enhancer chromatin of muscle-specific genes usually correlates with their expression
topic Original Contribution
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5168824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28018137
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