RESUMO
Inflammation is activated prior to symptoms in neurodegenerative diseases, providing a plausible pathogenic mechanism. Indeed, genetic and pharmacological ablation studies in animal models of several neurodegenerative diseases demonstrate that inflammation is required for pathology. However, while there is growing evidence that inflammation-mediated pathology may be the common mechanism underlying neurodegenerative diseases, including those due to dominantly inherited expanded repeats, the proximal causal agent is unknown. Expanded CAG.CUG repeat double-stranded RNA causes inflammation-mediated pathology when expressed in Drosophila. Repeat dsRNA is recognized by Dicer-2 as a foreign or 'non-self' molecule triggering both antiviral RNA and RNAi pathways. Neither of the RNAi pathway cofactors R2D2 nor loquacious are necessary, indicating antiviral RNA activation. RNA modification enables avoidance of recognition as 'non-self' by the innate inflammatory surveillance system. Human ADAR1 edits RNA conferring 'self' status and when co-expressed with expanded CAG.CUG dsRNA in Drosophila the pathology is lost. Cricket Paralysis Virus protein CrPV-1A is a known antagonist of Argonaute-2 in Drosophila antiviral defense. CrPV-1A co-expression also rescues pathogenesis, confirming anti-viral-RNA response. Repeat expansion mutation therefore confers 'non-self' recognition of endogenous RNA, thereby providing a proximal, autoinflammatory trigger for expanded repeat neurodegenerative diseases.
Assuntos
Resistência à Doença/genética , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno/genética , Mutação , Doenças Neurodegenerativas/genética , RNA de Cadeia Dupla/genética , Expansão das Repetições de Trinucleotídeos , Viroses/genética , Animais , Proteínas Argonautas/metabolismo , Variações do Número de Cópias de DNA , Dicistroviridae/fisiologia , Modelos Animais de Doenças , Drosophila , Proteínas de Drosophila/metabolismo , Doenças Neurodegenerativas/complicações , Doenças Neurodegenerativas/patologia , Interferência de RNA , RNA de Cadeia Dupla/metabolismo , Proteínas de Ligação a RNA/metabolismo , Viroses/complicações , Viroses/virologiaRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Cytosine methylation is a stable epigenetic modification of DNA that plays an important role in both normal physiology and disease. Most diseases exhibit some degree of sexual dimorphism, but the extent to which epigenetic states are influenced by sex is understudied and poorly understood. To address this deficit we studied DNA methylation patterns across multiple reduced representation bisulphite sequencing datasets (from liver, heart, brain, muscle and spleen) derived from isogenic male and female mice. RESULTS: DNA methylation patterns varied significantly from tissue to tissue, as expected, but they also varied between the sexes, with thousands of sexually dimorphic loci identified. The loci affected were largely autonomous to each tissue, even within tissues derived from the same germ layer. At most loci, differences between genders were driven by females exhibiting hypermethylation relative to males; a proportion of these differences were independent of the presence of testosterone in males. Loci harbouring gender differences were clustered in ontologies related to tissue function. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that gender is underwritten in the epigenome in a tissue-specific and potentially sex hormone-independent manner. Gender-specific epigenetic states are likely to have important implications for understanding sexually dimorphic phenotypes in health and disease.
Assuntos
Metilação de DNA , Caracteres Sexuais , Animais , Animais Congênicos , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Feminino , Fígado/metabolismo , Masculino , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Miocárdio/metabolismo , Especificidade de Órgãos , Testosterona/fisiologiaRESUMO
The Piwi-piRNA pathway is active in animal germ cells where its functions are required for germ cell maintenance and gamete differentiation. Piwi proteins and piRNAs have been detected outside germline tissue in multiple phyla, but activity of the pathway in mammalian somatic cells has been little explored. In particular, Piwi expression has been observed in cancer cells, but nothing is known about the piRNA partners or the function of the system in these cells. We have surveyed the expression of the three human Piwi genes, Hiwi, Hili and Hiwi2, in multiple normal tissues and cancer cell lines. We find that Hiwi2 is ubiquitously expressed; in cancer cells the protein is largely restricted to the cytoplasm and is associated with translating ribosomes. Immunoprecipitation of Hiwi2 from MDAMB231 cancer cells enriches for piRNAs that are predominantly derived from processed tRNAs and expressed genes, species which can also be found in adult human testis. Our studies indicate that a Piwi-piRNA pathway is present in human somatic cells, with an uncharacterised function linked to translation. Taking this evidence together with evidence from primitive organisms, we propose that this somatic function of the pathway predates the germline functions of the pathway in modern animals.
Assuntos
Proteínas/metabolismo , RNA Interferente Pequeno/metabolismo , RNA de Transferência/metabolismo , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Metilação de DNA , Genoma Humano , Humanos , Processamento Pós-Transcricional do RNA , Pequeno RNA não Traduzido/metabolismo , Proteínas de Ligação a RNARESUMO
Exposure to poor maternal nutrition around the time of conception results in an early prepartum activation of the fetal pituitary-adrenal axis and in increased adrenal growth and stress response after birth associated with epigenetic changes in a differentially methylated region (DMR) of adrenal IGF2/H19. We have determined the effects of maternal undernutrition during the periconceptional period (PCUN: 70% of control intake from 60 days before until 6 days after conception) and early preimplantation period (PIUN: 70% of control intake for 6 days after conception) on fetal plasma ACTH and cortisol concentrations and fetal adrenal ACTHR, StAR, 3ßHSD, CYP11B, CYP17, TGFß1, IGF1, IGF1R, IGF2, and IGF2R mRNA expression and the methylation level of sites within the DMRs of IGF2/H19 and IGF2R in the adrenal of twin and singleton fetuses at 136-138 days gestation. Being a twin resulted in a delayed prepartum increase in fetal ACTH and in a lower cortisol response to CRH in the control but not PCUN and PIUN groups. PCUN, but not PIUN, resulted in an increase in adrenal weight and CYP17 expression in singletons, a decrease in adrenal IGF2 expression in singletons, and an increase in adrenal IGF2R expression in both twins and singletons. IGF2/H19 and IGF2R DMR methylation levels and ACTHR expression were lower in the twin adrenal. Thus, exposure of the oocyte and embryo to maternal undernutrition or to the environment of a twin pregnancy have differential effects on epigenetic and other factors that regulate fetal adrenal growth and IGF2 and IGF2R expression.
Assuntos
Glândulas Suprarrenais/embriologia , Embrião de Mamíferos/embriologia , Epigênese Genética , Desnutrição/fisiopatologia , Fenômenos Fisiológicos da Nutrição Materna , Prenhez/fisiologia , Gravidez Múltipla/fisiologia , Ovinos/embriologia , Glândulas Suprarrenais/metabolismo , Hormônio Adrenocorticotrópico/sangue , Animais , Metilação de DNA , Embrião de Mamíferos/metabolismo , Feminino , Fertilização/fisiologia , Genótipo , Hidrocortisona/sangue , Gravidez , Prenhez/genética , Prenhez/metabolismo , Gravidez Múltipla/genética , Gravidez Múltipla/metabolismo , Ovinos/genética , Ovinos/fisiologiaRESUMO
Epigenetic changes can be induced by adverse environmental exposures, such as nutritional imbalance, but little is known about the nature or extent of these changes. Here we have explored the epigenomic effects of a sustained nutritional change, excess dietary methyl donors, by assessing genomic CpG methylation patterns in isogenic mice exposed for one or six generations. We find stochastic variation in methylation levels at many loci; exposure to methyl donors increases the magnitude of this variation and the number of variable loci. Several gene ontology categories are significantly overrepresented in genes proximal to these methylation-variable loci, suggesting that certain pathways are susceptible to environmental influence on their epigenetic states. Long-term exposure to the diet (six generations) results in a larger number of loci exhibiting epigenetic variability, suggesting that some of the induced changes are heritable. This finding presents the possibility that epigenetic variation within populations can be induced by environmental change, providing a vehicle for disease predisposition and possibly a substrate for natural selection.
Assuntos
5-Metilcitosina/análise , Citosina/metabolismo , Suplementos Nutricionais/efeitos adversos , Epigênese Genética , Variação Genética , Sulfitos/análise , Alelos , Animais , Ilhas de CpG , Metilação de DNA , Meio Ambiente , Expressão Gênica , Loci Gênicos , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Fenótipo , Análise de Componente Principal , Regiões Promotoras Genéticas , Sequências Repetitivas de Ácido Nucleico , Processos EstocásticosRESUMO
Natural selection acts on variation that is typically assumed to be genetic in origin. But epigenetic mechanisms, which are interposed between the genome and its environment, can create diversity independently of genetic variation. Epigenetic states can respond to environmental cues, and can be heritable, thus providing a means by which environmentally responsive phenotypes might be selectable independent of genotype. Here, we have tested the possibility that environment and selection can act together to increase the penetrance of an epigenetically determined phenotype. We used isogenic A(vy) mice, in which the epigenetic state of the A(vy) allele is sensitive to dietary methyl donors. By combining methyl donor supplementation with selection for a silent A(vy) allele, we progressively increased the prevalence of the associated phenotype in the population over five generations. After withdrawal of the dietary supplement, the shift persisted for one generation but was lost in subsequent generations. Our data provide the first demonstration that selection for a purely epigenetic trait can result in cumulative germline effects in mammals. These results present an alternative to the paradigm that natural selection acts only on genetic variation, and suggest that epigenetic changes could underlie rapid adaptation of species in response to natural environmental fluctuations.
Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Metilação de DNA/genética , Meio Ambiente , Epigênese Genética/genética , Genética Populacional , Penetrância , Seleção Genética , Animais , Sequência de Bases , Biologia Computacional , Cruzamentos Genéticos , Suplementos Nutricionais , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Camundongos Transgênicos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Análise de Sequência de DNARESUMO
Adverse conditions in early life result in increased activation of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis and in stress responsiveness in offspring. We have developed a model in which "donor" ewes are either normally nourished or overnourished prior to a period of dietary restriction, before transfer of the embryo at 6-7 d after conception to a ewe of normal weight and nutritional history. A moderate restriction of energy intake during the periconceptional period in both normal weight and overweight ewes resulted in increased adrenal mass in male and female lambs and an increased cortisol response to stress in female lambs. The increase in adrenal weight in lambs exposed to periconceptional undernutrition was associated with a decrease in the adrenal mRNA expression of IGF2 and decreased methylation in the proximal CTCF-binding site in the differentially methylated region of the IGF2/H19 gene. Thus, weight loss in both normal and overweight mothers during the periconceptional period results in epigenetic modification of IGF2 in the adrenal gland, adrenal overgrowth, and increased vulnerability to stress in offspring. Determining the appropriate approach to weight loss in the periconceptional period may therefore be important in overweight or obese women seeking to become pregnant.
Assuntos
Glândulas Suprarrenais/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Peso Corporal , Epigênese Genética , Fator de Crescimento Insulin-Like II/genética , Desnutrição/fisiopatologia , Sobrepeso , Animais , Animais Recém-Nascidos , Feminino , Fertilização , Hidrocortisona/farmacologia , Masculino , Mães , Gravidez , RNA Mensageiro , Ovinos , Redução de PesoRESUMO
Tumours and immortalized cells avoid telomere attrition by using either the ribonucleoprotein enzyme telomerase or a recombination-based alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT) mechanism. Available evidence from mice suggests that the epigenetic state of the telomere may influence the mechanism of telomere maintenance, but this has not been directly tested in human cancer. Here we investigated cytosine methylation directly adjacent to the telomere as a marker of the telomere's epigenetic state in a panel of human cell lines. We find that while ALT cells show highly heterogeneous patterns of subtelomeric methylation, subtelomeric regions in telomerase-positive cells invariably show denser methylation than normal cells, being almost completely methylated. When compared to matched normal and ALT cells, telomerase-positive cells also exhibit reduced levels of the telomeric repeat-containing-RNA (TERRA), whose transcription originates in the subtelomere. Our results are consistent with the notion that TERRA may inhibit telomerase: the heavy cytosine methylation we observe in telomerase-positive cells may reflect selection for TERRA silencing in order to facilitate telomerase activity at the telomere. These data suggest that the epigenetic differences between telomerase-positive and ALT cells may underlie the mechanism of telomere maintenance in human tumorigenesis and highlight the broad reaching consequences of epigenetic dysregulation in cancer.
Assuntos
Metilação de DNA , Epigênese Genética , Telomerase/metabolismo , Telômero/metabolismo , Transcrição Gênica , Linhagem Celular Transformada , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Células Cultivadas , Humanos , Telômero/químicaRESUMO
Parental health or exposures can affect the lifetime health outcomes of offspring, independently of inherited genotypes. Such 'epigenetic' effects occur over a broad range of environmental stressors, including defects in parental metabolism. Although maternal metabolic effects are well documented, it has only recently been established that that there is also an independent paternal contribution to long-term metabolic health. Both paternal undernutrition and overnutrition can induce metabolic phenotypes in immediate offspring, and in some cases, the induced phenotype can affect multiple generations, implying inheritance of an acquired trait. The male lineage transmission of metabolic disease risk in these cases implicates a heritable factor carried by sperm. Sperm-based transmission provides a tractable system to interrogate heritable epigenetic factors influencing metabolism, and as detailed here, animal models of paternal programming have already provided some significant insights. Here, we review the evidence for paternal programming of metabolism in humans and animal models, and the available evidence on potential underlying mechanisms. Programming by paternal metabolism can be observed in multiple species across animal phyla, suggesting that this phenomenon may have a unique evolutionary significance.
Assuntos
Epigênese Genética , Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Predisposição Genética para Doença , Doenças Metabólicas/etiologia , Doenças Metabólicas/metabolismo , Herança Paterna , Adaptação Biológica/genética , Animais , Metabolismo Energético , Humanos , Doenças Metabólicas/epidemiologia , Modelos Animais , RiscoRESUMO
The complex interaction between obesity, Western-style diets, and cardiovascular disease is of increasing interest, with a growing number of children being born to obese parents with poor lifestyle choices. These offspring have themselves an increased susceptibility to obesity and subsequent cardiovascular disease in adult life, which may be 'programmed' by their intrauterine environment. Cardiac microRNAs (miRNAs) are affected by multiple disease states, and have also been shown to be capable of exerting a hormone-like control on whole body metabolism. Here we sought to determine the effect of prenatal exposure to maternal obesity and/or postnatal exposure to a Western diet on miRNA expression in the heart. Unbiased small RNA sequencing was carried out on cardiac tissue from young adult mice born to lean or obese mothers; offspring were weaned onto either a low-fat control diet or a high-fat Western-style diet. We found 8 cardiac miRNAs that were significantly altered in response to maternal obesity, but only when the offspring were challenged postnatally with the Western diet. In contrast, postnatal exposure to the diet alone induced significant changes to the expression of a much larger number of miRNAs (33 in offspring of lean and 46 in offspring of obese). Many of the affected miRNAs have previously been implicated in various cardiac pathologies. The pervasive cardiac miRNA changes induced by a Western diet suggest that an individual's lifestyle choices outweigh the impact of any programming effects by maternal obesity on miRNA-related cardiac health.
Assuntos
Doenças Cardiovasculares/genética , Epigênese Genética , MicroRNAs/genética , Miocárdio/metabolismo , Obesidade/genética , Complicações na Gravidez/genética , Efeitos Tardios da Exposição Pré-Natal/genética , Animais , Doenças Cardiovasculares/etiologia , Feminino , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , MicroRNAs/metabolismo , Obesidade/metabolismo , Gravidez , Complicações na Gravidez/metabolismoRESUMO
OBJECTIVE: Parental obesity can induce metabolic phenotypes in offspring independent of the inherited DNA sequence. Here we asked whether such non-genetic acquired metabolic traits can be passed on to a second generation that has never been exposed to obesity, even as germ cells. METHODS: We examined the F1, F2, and F3 a/a offspring derived from F0 matings of obese prediabetic A (vy) /a sires and lean a/a dams. After F0, only lean a/a mice were used for breeding. RESULTS: We found that F1 sons of obese founder males exhibited defects in glucose and lipid metabolism, but only upon a post-weaning dietary challenge. F1 males transmitted these defects to their own male progeny (F2) in the absence of the dietary challenge, but the phenotype was largely attenuated by F3. The sperm of F1 males exhibited changes in the abundance of several small RNA species, including the recently reported diet-responsive tRNA-derived fragments. CONCLUSIONS: These data indicate that induced metabolic phenotypes may be propagated for a generation beyond any direct exposure to an inducing factor. This non-genetic inheritance likely occurs via the actions of sperm noncoding RNA.
Assuntos
Proteína Agouti Sinalizadora/genética , Epigênese Genética/genética , Proteínas F-Box/genética , Regulação da Expressão Gênica/genética , Genes de Partícula A Intracisternal/genética , Sequências Reguladoras de Ácido Nucleico , Retroelementos/genética , Animais , Ectromelia/genética , Fator 8 de Crescimento de Fibroblasto/biossíntese , Fator 8 de Crescimento de Fibroblasto/genética , Fator 8 de Crescimento de Fibroblasto/fisiologia , Instabilidade Genômica , Camundongos , Mosaicismo , Mutagênese Insercional , Fenótipo , Sequências Repetidas Terminais/genéticaRESUMO
The ability of environmental exposures to induce phenotypic change across multiple generations of offspring has gathered an enormous amount of interest in recent years. There are by now many examples of nongenetic transgenerational effects of environmental exposures, covering a broad range of stressors. Available evidence indicates that epigenetic inheritance may mediate at least some of these transgenerational effects, but how environmental exposures induce changes to the epigenome of the germline is unknown. One possibility is that exposed somatic cells can communicate their exposures to the germline to induce a stable change. In this Perspective, we propose that extracellular vesicles shed by somatic cells represent a credible means by which environmental experience could effect a transmissible epigenetic change in the germline, leading to the inheritance of acquired traits.
Assuntos
Exposição Ambiental , Epigênese Genética , Vesículas Extracelulares/efeitos dos fármacos , Interação Gene-Ambiente , Células Germinativas/efeitos dos fármacos , Mutagênicos/toxicidade , Animais , Comunicação Celular , Meio Ambiente , Vesículas Extracelulares/genética , Vesículas Extracelulares/metabolismo , Células Germinativas/citologia , Células Germinativas/metabolismo , Humanos , Padrões de Herança , Camundongos , Fenótipo , Pequeno RNA não Traduzido/genética , Pequeno RNA não Traduzido/metabolismo , Transdução de SinaisAssuntos
Alelos , Metilação de DNA , Epigênese Genética , Células Germinativas , Animais , CamundongosRESUMO
Intrauterine nutrition can program metabolism, creating stable changes in physiology that may have significant health consequences. The mechanism underlying these changes is widely assumed to involve epigenetic changes to the expression of metabolic genes, but evidence supporting this idea is limited. Here we have performed the first study of the epigenomic consequences of exposure to maternal obesity and diabetes. We used a mouse model of natural-onset obesity that allows comparison of genetically identical mice whose mothers were either obese and diabetic or lean with a normal metabolism. We find that the offspring of obese mothers have a latent metabolic phenotype that is unmasked by exposure to a Western-style diet, resulting in glucose intolerance, insulin resistance and hepatic steatosis. The offspring show changes in hepatic gene expression and widespread but subtle alterations in cytosine methylation. Contrary to expectation, these molecular changes do not point to metabolic pathways but instead reside in broadly developmental ontologies. We propose that, rather than being adaptive, these changes may simply produce an inappropriate response to suboptimal environments; maladaptive phenotypes may be avoidable if postnatal nutrition is carefully controlled.
Assuntos
Diabetes Mellitus Tipo 2/metabolismo , Epigênese Genética , Expressão Gênica , Fígado/metabolismo , Obesidade/metabolismo , Complicações na Gravidez/metabolismo , Animais , Diabetes Mellitus Tipo 2/genética , Dieta , Feminino , Desenvolvimento Fetal , Fígado/patologia , Masculino , Camundongos , Mitocôndrias Hepáticas/genética , Mitocôndrias Hepáticas/metabolismo , Gravidez , Gravidez em Diabéticas/metabolismoRESUMO
Epigenetic changes to gene expression can result in heritable phenotypic characteristics that are not encoded in the DNA itself, but rather by biochemical modifications to the DNA or associated chromatin proteins. Interposed between genes and environment, these epigenetic modifications can be influenced by environmental factors to affect phenotype for multiple generations. This raises the possibility that epigenetic states provide a substrate for natural selection, with the potential to participate in the rapid adaptation of species to changes in environment. Any direct test of this hypothesis would require the ability to measure epigenetic states over evolutionary timescales. Here we describe the first single-base resolution of cytosine methylation patterns in an ancient mammalian genome, by bisulphite allelic sequencing of loci from late Pleistocene Bison priscus remains. Retrotransposons and the differentially methylated regions of imprinted loci displayed methylation patterns identical to those derived from fresh bovine tissue, indicating that methylation patterns are preserved in the ancient DNA. Our findings establish the biochemical stability of methylated cytosines over extensive time frames, and provide the first direct evidence that cytosine methylation patterns are retained in DNA from ancient specimens. The ability to resolve cytosine methylation in ancient DNA provides a powerful means to study the role of epigenetics in evolution.
Assuntos
Citosina/metabolismo , Metilação de DNA/genética , Animais , Bison/genética , Epigênese Genética/genética , Genoma/genética , Mamíferos , Retroelementos/genéticaRESUMO
Epigenetic silencing is a pervasive mode of gene regulation in multicellular eukaryotes: stable differentiation of somatic cell types requires the maintenance of subsets of genes in an active or silent state. The variety of molecules involved, and the requirement for active maintenance of epigenetic states, creates the potential for errors on a large scale. When epigenetic errors - or epimutations - activate or inactivate a critical gene, they may cause disease. An epimutation that occurs in the germline or early embryo can affect all, or most, of the soma and phenocopy genetic disease. But the stochastic and reversible nature of epigenetic phenomena predicts that epimutations are likely to be mosaic and inherited in a nonmendelian manner; epigenetic diseases will thus rarely behave in the comfortably predictable manner of genetic diseases but will display variable expressivity and complex patterns of inheritance. Much phenotypic variation and common disease might be explained by epigenetic variation and aberration. The known examples of true epigenetic disease are at present limited, but this may reflect only the difficulty in distinguishing causal epigenetic aberrations from those that are merely consequences of disease, a challenge further extended by the impact of environmental agents on epigenetic mechanisms. The rapidly developing molecular characterization of epigenomes, and the new ability to survey epigenetic marks on whole genomes, may answer many questions about the causal role of epigenetics in disease; these answers have the potential to transform our understanding of human disease.
Assuntos
Epigênese Genética/genética , Predisposição Genética para Doença/genética , Animais , Metilação de DNA , Diploide , Predisposição Genética para Doença/epidemiologia , Humanos , Neoplasias/genética , Proteínas Nucleares/genéticaRESUMO
BACKGROUND: The viable yellow allele of agouti (A(vy)) is remarkable for its unstable and partially heritable epigenetic state, which produces wide variation in phenotypes of isogenic mice. In the A(vy) allele an inserted intracisternal A particle (IAP) acts as a controlling element which deregulates expression of agouti by transcription from the LTR of the IAP; the phenotypic state has been linked to CpG methylation of the LTR. Phenotypic variation between A(vy) mice indicates that the epigenetic state of the IAP is unstable in the germline. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We have made a detailed examination of somatic methylation of the IAP using bisulphite allelic sequencing, and find that the promoter is incompletely methylated even when it is transcriptionally silent. In utero exposure to supplementary methyl donors, which alters the spectrum of A(vy) phenotypes, does not increase the density of CpG methylation in the silent LTR. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that, contrary to previous supposition, methyl donor supplementation acts through an indirect mechanism to silence A(vy). The incomplete cytosine methylation we observe at the somatically silent A(vy) allele may reflect its unstable germline state, and the influence of epigenetic modifications underlying CpG methylation.
Assuntos
Alelos , Ilhas de CpG/genética , Metilação de DNA , Genes de Partícula A Intracisternal/genética , Proteína Agouti Sinalizadora/genética , Animais , Sequência de Bases , Betaína/administração & dosagem , Colina/administração & dosagem , Suplementos Nutricionais , Epigênese Genética/efeitos dos fármacos , Feminino , Ácido Fólico/administração & dosagem , Células Germinativas/metabolismo , Masculino , Metionina/administração & dosagem , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C3H , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Mutagênese Insercional , Fenótipo , Regiões Promotoras Genéticas/genética , Retroelementos/genéticaRESUMO
Within the Western world's aging and increasingly overweight population, we are seeing an increasing prevalence of adult-onset, lifestyle-related disease such as diabetes, hypertension and atherosclerosis. There is significant evidence that suboptimal nutrition in pregnancy can lead to an increased risk of these diseases developing in offspring, and that this increased risk can be heritable. Thus, poor in utero nutrition may be a major contributor to the current cycle of obesity. While the molecular basis of this phenomenon is unknown, available evidence suggests that it can be mediated by epigenetic changes to gene expression. Here, we discuss epigenetics as a mediator of disease risk in response to nutritional cues. The potential for maternal nutrition to heritably alter epigenetic states may have implications for population health and adaptive evolution.
Assuntos
Metilação de DNA/fisiologia , Epigênese Genética/fisiologia , Desenvolvimento Fetal/fisiologia , Regulação da Expressão Gênica no Desenvolvimento/fisiologia , Obesidade/etiologia , Fenômenos Fisiológicos da Nutrição Pré-Natal/fisiologia , Adaptação Fisiológica/genética , Animais , Feminino , Humanos , Camundongos , Camundongos Mutantes , GravidezRESUMO
Epigenetic modifications provide all multicellular organisms with a system of gene regulation that allows clonally heritable yet reversible alterations in gene transcription. Errors in this complex system can give rise to abnormal gene silencing, termed 'epimutation'; importantly, this can occur in the absence of any underlying genetic defect. Epimutations are commonly somatic events, and are particularly prevalent in tumors, but we and others have shown that epimutation can also arise in the germline, giving rise to soma-wide transcriptional silencing of a gene. A germline epimutation can mimic the effect of an inactivating mutation, and in doing so, can phenocopy a genetic disease. In this article, we will review the recent findings with germline epimutation at the tumor suppressor gene MLH1, discuss the possible etiology of this phenomenon, and the implications of germline epimutation in humans.