Abstract

BackgroundThe interplay of epigenetic processes and the intestinal microbiota may play an important role in intestinal development and homeostasis. Previous studies have established that the microbiota regulates a large proportion of the intestinal epithelial transcriptome in the adult host, but microbial effects on DNA methylation and gene expression during early postnatal development are still poorly understood. Here, we sought to investigate the microbial effects on DNA methylation and the transcriptome of intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) during postnatal development.MethodsWe collected IECs from the small intestine of each of five 1-, 4- and 12 to 16-week-old mice representing the infant, juvenile, and adult states, raised either in the presence or absence of a microbiota. The DNA methylation profile was determined using reduced representation bisulfite sequencing (RRBS) and the epithelial transcriptome by RNA sequencing using paired samples from each individual mouse to analyze the link between microbiota, gene expression, and DNA methylation.ResultsWe found that microbiota-dependent and -independent processes act together to shape the postnatal development of the transcriptome and DNA methylation signatures of IECs. The bacterial effect on the transcriptome increased over time, whereas most microbiota-dependent DNA methylation differences were detected already early after birth. Microbiota-responsive transcripts could be attributed to stage-specific cellular programs during postnatal development and regulated gene sets involved primarily immune pathways and metabolic processes. Integrated analysis of the methylome and transcriptome data identified 126 genomic loci at which coupled differential DNA methylation and RNA transcription were associated with the presence of intestinal microbiota. We validated a subset of differentially expressed and methylated genes in an independent mouse cohort, indicating the existence of microbiota-dependent “functional” methylation sites which may impact on long-term gene expression signatures in IECs.ConclusionsOur study represents the first genome-wide analysis of microbiota-mediated effects on maturation of DNA methylation signatures and the transcriptional program of IECs after birth. It indicates that the gut microbiota dynamically modulates large portions of the epithelial transcriptome during postnatal development, but targets only a subset of microbially responsive genes through their DNA methylation status.

Highlights

  • The interplay of epigenetic processes and the intestinal microbiota may play an important role in intestinal development and homeostasis

  • We systematically investigated the regulatory effects of the microbiota on the transcriptome and the genomewide DNA methylation status of intestinal epithelial cell (IEC) from the small intestine of infant, juvenile, and adult mice which were raised in either the presence or absence of a microbiota

  • The value of our experimental approach is demonstrated by the finding that several previous studies established that the microbiota modulates the expression of more than 2000 genes in the intestinal epithelium [6, 9, 10], only a subset of these microbiotaresponsive genes appear to be regulated by the epigenetic process of DNA methylation

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Summary

Introduction

The interplay of epigenetic processes and the intestinal microbiota may play an important role in intestinal development and homeostasis. Previous studies have established that the microbiota regulates a large proportion of the intestinal epithelial transcriptome in the adult host, but microbial effects on DNA methylation and gene expression during early postnatal development are still poorly understood. Several mechanisms have been implicated in how the gut microbiota can drive these global changes in the host transcriptome. Transcriptional regulators such as NFκB (nuclear factor kappa-light-chainenhancer of activated B cells) or CEBPB (CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein beta) may be engaged by the microbiota to modulate the expression of specific target genes [6, 12]. The microbiota have the potential to modulate host epigenetic mechanisms and thereby regulate transcription more globally [13,14,15,16,17,18]. The intestinal microbiota may modulate DNA methylation, since microbially produced folate is an essential methyl donor during DNA methylation [16]

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