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Repression of germline genes by PRC1.6 and SETDB1 in the early embryo precedes DNA methylation-mediated silencing

Authors :
Akihiko Okuda
Ayumu Suzuki
Kentaro Mochizuki
Kenjiro Shirane
Haruhiko Koseki
Kousuke Uranishi
Aaron B. Bogutz
Jafar Sharif
Matthew C. Lorincz
Sanne M. Janssen
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2021), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2021.

Abstract

Silencing of a subset of germline genes is dependent upon DNA methylation (DNAme) post-implantation. However, these genes are generally hypomethylated in the blastocyst, implicating alternative repressive pathways before implantation. Indeed, in embryonic stem cells (ESCs), an overlapping set of genes, including germline “genome-defence” (GGD) genes, are upregulated following deletion of the H3K9 methyltransferase SETDB1 or subunits of the non-canonical PRC1 complex PRC1.6. Here, we show that in pre-implantation embryos and naïve ESCs (nESCs), hypomethylated promoters of germline genes bound by the PRC1.6 DNA-binding subunits MGA/MAX/E2F6 are enriched for RING1B-dependent H2AK119ub1 and H3K9me3. Accordingly, repression of these genes in nESCs shows a greater dependence on PRC1.6 than DNAme. In contrast, GGD genes are hypermethylated in epiblast-like cells (EpiLCs) and their silencing is dependent upon SETDB1, PRC1.6/RING1B and DNAme, with H3K9me3 and DNAme establishment dependent upon MGA binding. Thus, GGD genes are initially repressed by PRC1.6, with DNAme subsequently engaged in post-implantation embryos.<br />Germline genes are repressed by DNA methylation and histone marks. Here, the authors show that specific germline genes hypomethylated pre-implantation are enriched for PRC1.6, H2AK119ub1 and H3K9me3, which coordinately repress their expression.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ecfe3e3a5f168ba1ac4cb64125ae8894