Abstract

BackgroundDNA methylation is one way to encode epigenetic information and plays a crucial role in regulating gene expression during embryonic development. DNA methylation marks are established by the DNA methyltransferases and, recently, a mechanism for active DNA demethylation has emerged involving the ten-eleven translocator proteins and thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG). However, so far it is not clear how these enzymes are recruited to, and regulate DNA methylation at, specific genomic loci. A number of studies imply that sequence-specific transcription factors are involved in targeting DNA methylation and demethylation processes. Oestrogen receptor beta (ERβ) is a ligand-inducible transcription factor regulating gene expression in response to the female sex hormone oestrogen. Previously, we found that ERβ deficiency results in changes in DNA methylation patterns at two gene promoters, implicating an involvement of ERβ in DNA methylation. In this study, we set out to explore this involvement on a genome-wide level, and to investigate the underlying mechanisms of this function.ResultsUsing reduced representation bisulfite sequencing, we compared genome-wide DNA methylation in mouse embryonic fibroblasts derived from wildtype and ERβ knock-out mice, and identified around 8000 differentially methylated positions (DMPs). Validation and further characterisation of selected DMPs showed that differences in methylation correlated with changes in expression of the nearest gene. Additionally, re-introduction of ERβ into the knock-out cells could reverse hypermethylation and reactivate expression of some of the genes. We also show that ERβ is recruited to regions around hypermethylated DMPs. Finally, we demonstrate here that ERβ interacts with TDG and that TDG binds ERβ-dependently to hypermethylated DMPs.ConclusionWe provide evidence that ERβ plays a role in regulating DNA methylation at specific genomic loci, likely as the result of its interaction with TDG at these regions. Our findings imply a novel function of ERβ, beyond direct transcriptional control, in regulating DNA methylation at target genes. Further, they shed light on the question how DNA methylation is regulated at specific genomic loci by supporting a concept in which sequence-specific transcription factors can target factors that regulate DNA methylation patterns.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13072-016-0055-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorised users.

Highlights

  • DNA methylation is one way to encode epigenetic information and plays a crucial role in regulating gene expression during embryonic development

  • oestrogen receptor β (ERβ) deficiency leads to methylation changes in developmental genes To identify genomic loci that show DNA methylation changes in the absence of ERβ [GenBank: NM_207707, Swiss-Prot: O08537], we conducted reduced representation bisulfite sequencing (RRBS [36]) with mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) derived from ERβ+/+ and ERβ−/− mice [25]

  • Around 3 × 105 CpGs were covered by the screen, which corresponds to 2.5 % of all CpGs in the mouse genome

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Summary

Introduction

DNA methylation is one way to encode epigenetic information and plays a crucial role in regulating gene expression during embryonic development. Genome-wide mapping revealed that 5hmC is mostly found in pluripotent cells and neurons, in bodies of transcribed genes, and in gene regulatory regions (promoters and transcriptional enhancers) [8], often concomitant with the bivalent chromatin marks lysine 4 di- and tri-methylation and lysine 27 tri-methylation at histone H3 (H3K4m2/3 and H3K27m3, respectively) [9] Such regions are poised for activation or permanent silencing during lineage commitment and terminal cell differentiation [10]. Evidence for active DNA demethylation by this mechanism stems from the findings that Tdg deficiency is embryonic lethal in mice [13, 14] and leads to changes in the distribution of cytosine modifications during stem cell differentiation [13, 15, 16], in particular in gene regulatory regions such as promoters and enhancers. 5fC and 5caC accumulate in the absence of Tdg in embryonic stem cells (ESCs) at promoter and enhancer regions [15, 16]

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