Abstract

Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic process leading to parent-of-origin–specific DNA methylation and gene expression. To date, ∼60 imprinted human genes are known. Based on genome-wide methylation analysis of a patient with multiple imprinting defects, we have identified a differentially methylated CpG island in intron 2 of the retinoblastoma (RB1) gene on chromosome 13. The CpG island is part of a 5′-truncated, processed pseudogene derived from the KIAA0649 gene on chromosome 9 and corresponds to two small CpG islands in the open reading frame of the ancestral gene. It is methylated on the maternal chromosome 13 and acts as a weak promoter for an alternative RB1 transcript on the paternal chromosome 13. In four other KIAA0649 pseudogene copies, which are located on chromosome 22, the two CpG islands have deteriorated and the CpG dinucleotides are fully methylated. By analysing allelic RB1 transcript levels in blood cells, as well as in hypermethylated and 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine–treated lymphoblastoid cells, we have found that differential methylation of the CpG island skews RB1 gene expression in favor of the maternal allele. Thus, RB1 is imprinted in the same direction as CDKN1C, which operates upstream of RB1. The imprinting of two components of the same pathway indicates that there has been strong evolutionary selection for maternal inhibition of cell proliferation.

Highlights

  • Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic process leading to parentof-origin specific DNA methylation and gene expression [1,2]

  • Based on genome-wide methylation analysis of this patient as described here we have found that the retinoblastoma 1 (RB1) gene is imprinted

  • These include differential penetrance and age at onset in retinoblastoma and an Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic process leading to parent-of-origin–specific DNA methylation and gene expression

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Summary

Introduction

Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic process leading to parentof-origin specific DNA methylation and gene expression [1,2]. Imprints are established during gametogenesis, maintained after fertilization and erased in primordial germ cells (for a recent review see Wood and Oakey, 2006) [3] It is still a matter of debate, how and why genomic imprinting evolved. Naturally occurring imprinting defects have been identified in human patients, but are unknown in mice. These imprinting defects provide a unique opportunity to identify imprinting control elements, imprinting factors and imprinted genes. Parent-of-origin effects have been reported in human phenotypes associated with mutations of the RB1 gene These include differential penetrance and age at onset in retinoblastoma and an

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