Abstract

Epigenetic modifiers (EM; methionine, choline, folate, and vitamin B12) are important for early embryonic development due to their roles as methyl donors or cofactors in methylation reactions. Additionally, they are essential for the synthesis of nucleotides, polyamines, redox equivalents, and energy metabolites. Despite their importance, investigation into the supplementation of EM in ruminants has been limited to one or two epigenetic modifiers. Like all biochemical pathways, one-carbon metabolism needs to be stoichiometrically balanced. Thus, we investigated the effects of supplementing four EM encompassing the methionine–folate cycle on bovine embryonic fibroblast growth, mitochondrial function, and DNA methylation. We hypothesized that EM supplemented to embryonic fibroblasts cultured in divergent glucose media would increase mitochondrial respiration and cell growth rate and alter DNA methylation as reflected by changes in the gene expression of enzymes involved in methylation reactions, thereby improving the growth parameters beyond Control treated cells. Bovine embryonic fibroblast cells were cultured in Eagle’s minimum essential medium with 1 g/L glucose (Low) or 4.5 g/L glucose (High). The control medium contained no additional OCM, whereas the treated media contained supplemented EM at 2.5, 5, and 10 times (×2.5, ×5, and ×10, respectively) the control media, except for methionine (limited to ×2). Therefore, the experimental design was a 2 (levels of glucose) × 4 (levels of EM) factorial arrangement of treatments. Cells were passaged three times in their respective treatment media before analysis for growth rate, cell proliferation, mitochondrial respiration, transcript abundance of methionine–folate cycle enzymes, and DNA methylation by reduced-representation bisulfite sequencing. Total cell growth was greatest in High ×10 and mitochondrial maximal respiration, and reserve capacity was greatest (p < 0.01) for High ×2.5 and ×10 compared with all other treatments. In Low cells, the total growth rate, mitochondrial maximal respiration, and reserve capacity increased quadratically to 2.5 and ×5 and decreased to control levels at ×10. The biological processes identified due to differential methylation included the positive regulation of GTPase activity, molecular function, protein modification processes, phosphorylation, and metabolic processes. These data are interpreted to imply that EM increased the growth rate and mitochondrial function beyond Control treated cells in both Low and High cells, which may be due to changes in the methylation of genes involved with growth and energy metabolism.

Highlights

  • Nutritional programming, often called early metabolic programming, establishes that early nutrition affects the development and function of organ systems, resulting in changes to programmed metabolism, immune function, neurodevelopment, and other physiological processes throughout life (Barker, 2007)

  • The objectives of this study aimed to identify how supplementation of four EM involved in the methionine–folate cycle impacted mitochondrial respiration, cell growth rate, and DNA methylation

  • The objectives of this study were to identify how supplementation of four EM involved in the methionine–folate cycle impacted mitochondrial respiration, cell growth rate, and DNA methylation

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Summary

Introduction

Nutritional programming, often called early metabolic programming, establishes that early nutrition affects the development and function of organ systems, resulting in changes to programmed metabolism, immune function, neurodevelopment, and other physiological processes throughout life (Barker, 2007) In cattle, micronutrients such as B vitamins are synthesized by rumen microbes and are thought to be sufficient for embryonic and fetal development; recent data has shown an imbalance in the markers of B vitamin status, suggesting that this may not be the case (Crouse et al, 2019a). Embryos undergo immense epigenetic remodeling during early development, and identifying specific micronutrient requirements vs global energy requirements is needed This epigenetic remodeling is driven by DNA methylation and epigenetic modifications of histone tails, including methylation, acetylation, and phosphorylation. These epigenetic mechanisms altogether regulate transcription, growth, and cell fate, leaving a “memory” on the embryo that will be carried forward through subsequent developmental stages (Sugden and Holness, 2002; Jaenisch and Bird, 2003; Waterland and Jirtle, 2004)

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