Promoter-Adjacent DNA Hypermethylation Can Downmodulate Gene Expression: TBX15 in the Muscle Lineage.
Kenneth C EhrlichMichelle LaceyCarl BaribaultSagnik SenPierre Olivier EsteveSriharsa PradhanMelanie EhrlichPublished in: Epigenomes (2022)
TBX15 , which encodes a differentiation-related transcription factor, displays promoter-adjacent DNA hypermethylation in myoblasts and skeletal muscle (psoas) that is absent from non-expressing cells in other lineages. By whole-genome bisulfite sequencing (WGBS) and enzymatic methyl-seq (EM-seq), these hypermethylated regions were found to border both sides of a constitutively unmethylated promoter. To understand the functionality of this DNA hypermethylation, we cloned the differentially methylated sequences (DMRs) in CpG-free reporter vectors and tested them for promoter or enhancer activity upon transient transfection. These cloned regions exhibited strong promoter activity and, when placed upstream of a weak promoter, strong enhancer activity specifically in myoblast host cells. In vitro CpG methylation targeted to the DMR sequences in the plasmids resulted in 86-100% loss of promoter or enhancer activity, depending on the insert sequence. These results as well as chromatin epigenetic and transcription profiles for this gene in various cell types support the hypothesis that DNA hypermethylation immediately upstream and downstream of the unmethylated promoter region suppresses enhancer/extended promoter activity, thereby downmodulating, but not silencing, expression in myoblasts and certain kinds of skeletal muscle. This promoter-border hypermethylation was not found in cell types with a silent TBX15 gene, and these cells, instead, exhibit repressive chromatin in and around the promoter. TBX18, TBX2, TBX3 and TBX1 display TBX15 -like hypermethylated DMRs at their promoter borders and preferential expression in myoblasts. Therefore, promoter-adjacent DNA hypermethylation for downmodulating transcription to prevent overexpression may be used more frequently for transcription regulation than currently appreciated.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- dna methylation
- gene expression
- genome wide
- skeletal muscle
- genome wide identification
- dna binding
- single cell
- induced apoptosis
- single molecule
- circulating tumor
- escherichia coli
- cell free
- binding protein
- oxidative stress
- cell proliferation
- nucleic acid
- crispr cas
- long non coding rna
- insulin resistance
- cell therapy
- cell death
- rna seq
- type diabetes
- drug induced
- bone marrow
- signaling pathway
- drug delivery
- multidrug resistant
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cell fate