Abstract

BackgroundDNA methylomes are extensively reprogrammed during mouse pre-implantation and early germ cell development. The main feature of this reprogramming is a genome-wide decrease in 5-methylcytosine (5mC). Standard high-resolution single-stranded bisulfite sequencing techniques do not allow discrimination of the underlying passive (replication-dependent) or active enzymatic mechanisms of 5mC loss. We approached this problem by generating high-resolution deep hairpin bisulfite sequencing (DHBS) maps, allowing us to follow the patterns of symmetric DNA methylation at CpGs dyads on both DNA strands over single replications.ResultsWe compared DHBS maps of repetitive elements in the developing zygote, the early embryo, and primordial germ cells (PGCs) at defined stages of development. In the zygote, we observed distinct effects in paternal and maternal chromosomes. A significant loss of paternal DNA methylation was linked to replication and to an increase in continuous and dispersed hemimethylated CpG dyad patterns. Overall methylation levels at maternal copies remained largely unchanged, but showed an increased level of dispersed hemi-methylated CpG dyads. After the first cell cycle, the combined DHBS patterns of paternal and maternal chromosomes remained unchanged over the next three cell divisions. By contrast, in PGCs the DNA demethylation process was continuous, as seen by a consistent decrease in fully methylated CpG dyads over consecutive cell divisions.ConclusionsThe main driver of DNA demethylation in germ cells and in the zygote is partial impairment of maintenance of symmetric DNA methylation at CpG dyads. In the embryo, this passive demethylation is restricted to the first cell division, whereas it continues over several cell divisions in germ cells. The dispersed patterns of CpG dyads in the early-cleavage embryo suggest a continuous partial (and to a low extent active) loss of methylation apparently compensated for by selective de novo methylation. We conclude that a combination of passive and active demethylation events counteracted by de novo methylation are involved in the distinct reprogramming dynamics of DNA methylomes in the zygote, the early embryo, and PGCs.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1756-8935-8-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • DNA methylomes are extensively reprogrammed during mouse pre-implantation and early germ cell development

  • DNA methylation reprogramming of L1, major satellites (mSat), and IAP in the zygote is characterized by an increasing amount of hemimethylated CpG dyads To precisely determine DNA methylation symmetry of individual CpG dyads at single nucleotide resolution, we performed deep hairpin bisulfite sequencing (DHBS)

  • In line with previous data, we found that mSat are hypomethylated and IAP hypermethylated in both oocytes and sperm, whereas L1 elements are hypermethylated in sperm and hypomethylated in oocytes (Figure 1) [9,23,24]

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Summary

Introduction

DNA methylomes are extensively reprogrammed during mouse pre-implantation and early germ cell development. Standard high-resolution single-stranded bisulfite sequencing techniques do not allow discrimination of the underlying passive (replication-dependent) or active enzymatic mechanisms of 5mC loss. The life cycle of mammals is characterized by two phases of major epigenetic reprogramming: first during migration of the primordial germ cells (PGCs) to the genital ridge in the developing embryo, and the second after fertilization during pre-implantation development [1]. These phases of epigenetic reprogramming involve changes in histone modifications and the activation of pluripotency-associated factors. Active DNA demethylation involves enzymes that remove either the methyl group or the whole base, accompanied by activation of ubiquitous DNA repair pathways [10]

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