Title: Epigenetics and Imprinting
1Epigenetics and Imprinting
2Imprinting
- Describes the differential expression of genetic
material at chromosomal/allelic level, depending
on that material being maternal or paternal in
origin.
3What is the imprint at a molecular level?
- An imprint is an heritable tag
- Usually associated with differential DNA
methylation - The met CpG usually on the silent chromosome
- In addition, histone aceylation and methylation
has been identified
4Imprinting involves 3 distinct biological stages
- (a) Establishment of the imprint in gametes,
according to the sex of the individual - (b) Its maintenance during embryogenesis/adult
somatic tissues - (c) Erasure in the early germline
5Schematic of Imprinting
6Why imprinting?
- The advantages of biparental inheritance seem
clear from the recessive nature of many disease
mutations. - Imprinting could help to maintain sexual
reproduction.
7Imprinting in Development
- In mammals, imprinted genes have a vital role in
development of the embryo and neonate. - The division is not clear cut but
- placental development appears to rely more
heavily on paternal expression - embryonic growth appears to rely more heavily on
maternal expression.
8Imprinted Genes Present a complex Picture Of
Expression
- In embryonic development, monoallelic expression
is not always coincident with the onset of gene
expression - Can vary with development and differentiation.
9Imprinting, primary inactivation?
- Some evidence suggests that the imprint itself
does not have to be a primary inactivation event - The imprinting mechanism may involve additional
trans-acting molecules.
10Imprinting and Disease
- Approx 80 imprinted genes in the human genome
poss up to 600! - Non-mendelian inheritance pattern with parent of
origin effects - Best characterised syndromes
- Angelman/Prader-Willi syndromes on 15q (UBE3A-
AS) - Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) 11p (IGF2)
11Species Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Chr 01 01 06 06 06 07 07 07 07 07 07 07 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 Gene ARHI, NOEY2 TP73 PLAGL1 ZAC LOT1 HYMAI IGF2R, M6PR (disputed) GRB10, MEG1 PEG10 DLX5 MEST, PEG1, MESTIT1, PEG1-AS COPG2 (disputed PEG1-AS, MESTIT1 CPA4 WT1 (disputed) H19 IGF2 IGF2AS, PEG8 INS, insulin TRPM5, LTRPC5, MTR1 KCNQ1, KvLQT1 KCNQ1OT1, LIT1, KvLQT1-AS, KvDMR1 KCNQ1DN, BWRT CDKN1C, p57KIP2 SLC22A1L, IMPT1, BWR1A, ORCTL2, ITM, TSSC3, IPL, BWR1C, TSSC5, HET ,ZNF215 2G3-8 SDHD
12Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human Human 14 14 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 18 19 20 20 MEG3, GTL2 DLK1, PEG9 Paternally expressed non-coding transcripts on 15p (Prader-Willi syndrome region) MKRN3, ZNF127 NDN MAGEL2, NDNL1 SNRPN, SNURF PAR-SN HBII-13 PAR5, D15S226E HBII-85, PWCR1 IPW PAR1, D15S227E HBII-52 UBE3A, E6-AP, UBE3A-AS ATP10A, ATP10C Elongin A3 PEG3 NNAT, Neuronatin GNAS1, Gs alpha, NESP55, XLalpha s, GNAS-AS
13Features Of Imprinted Genes
- No direct sequence homology has been found among
imprinted genes. - Sequences carrying mat and pat gametic imprints
resemble CpG islands containing GC rich regions
of between 200 and 1500bp with a balanced CGGC
ratio. - Imprinted sequences contain or are closely
associated with a region of direct repeats
ranging in size between 25 and 120bp. They are
found in all imprinted genes analysed so far and
are evolutionarily conserved.
14Imprinting Clusters
- Imprinted genes are clustered
- Best understood on chromosome 15 and 11
- Complex coordinated regulation based on an
imprinting centre (IC) or an imprinting control
element (ICE) - Coodinates in cis expression of neighbouring
genes in one domain
15Action of Imprinting Centres
- Allele discriminating action of imprinting
centres based on epigenetic modifications of
chromatin - Typically via methylation of cytosines (DNA)and
histone acetlylation and methylation - Acetylation of histones associated with
transcriptionally active chromatin - Methylation of histones and DNA associated with
inactivation of transcription
16Imprinting and Transcription
- Methylation and acetylation lead to allele
specific accessibility to transcriptional
machinery - And to DNA binding proteins acting as enhancers
or insulators - Setting and stability of imprinted gene
expression controlled by ICs with multiple levels
of DNA and chromatin modifications
17More complexity IGF2
- IGF2 (chromosome 11) has been shown to be
imprinted very early on, in 8 cell human embryos - recruits different promoters to confer mono or
biallelic expression at different developmental
stages.
18.And KVLQT1
- KVLQT1 (chromosome 11) has been reported as
having a number of alternatively spliced
transcripts - shows both mono and biallelic expression patterns
in different tissues - Important in identification of imprinted genes
associated with imprinted disorders
19Conservation
- Obviously evolutionary conservation is a good way
to identify fundamentally important genes and
sequence motifs - A horse mare-donkey cross gives rise to a mule
but a donkey-stallion gives rise to a hinny - The callipyge gene phenotype beautiful buttocks
is only expressed when paternally inherited Hum
Mol Genet 1998 7No10 review
20Imprinting in animal models
- Once thought to be restricted to mammals, genomic
imprinting has been documented in angiosperm
plants 1970, zebrafish 1995, insects, and C.
elegans 2004 - There may be genomic imprinting in drosophila,
but transgenes have shown that imprinting switch
regions act as silencers in flies - In marsupials methylation on the X chr
preferentially inactivates paternal X - Mouse studies are one of the commonest in the
literature
21Of Mice and Men
- Mouse models have been helpful in identifying the
genes involved in Prader-Willi and Angelman
syndrome - The PWS mouse model has a partial maternal
duplication of the region of mouse chromosome 7
homologous to human 15q11-13 - The AS mouse model has a paternal duplication for
the same region
22(No Transcript)
23Imprinting in Mice Not Identical
- There are differences in imprinting between mice
and humans - Imprinting of H19, Igf2, p57kip2 and Snrpn is the
same - IGF2R appears to be monoallelic in mice and
biallelic in humans, though this may be
polymorphic
24Imprinting on Human Chromosome 15
- IC regulates chromatin structure, DNA methylation
and gene expression in a 2Mb region in 15q11-13 - Mutations in IC cause chromosome to be stuck as a
single gender and not assume the sex imprint of
its host. - gt7 imprinted transcripts in AS region, paternally
expressed - UBE3A is only coding transcript maternally
expressed
25Angelman Syndrome (AS)
- incidence of 1/20,000 live births
- severe mental retardation
- Lack of speech (commonly only a three to six word
vocabulary) - Ataxic gait
- Hand flapping
- Happy disposition including inappropriate
laughter - Diagnostic EEG
- Others
26(No Transcript)
27Chromosome 15 deletion in As and PWS
- Initially identified by the same cytogenetic
lesion i.e. the deletion of 15q11-13
28Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS)
- Clinically distinct syndrome
- frequency of about 1 in 25,000 and
- probably the most common syndromal cause of human
obesity Clinical features including - Mild mental retardation
- Obesity
- Short stature
29AS Oppositely Imprinted to PWS
30How Does AS Arise?
- AS caused by loss of function of a gene/genes
from the maternal chromosome 15q11-13 - (ICH study) 60 AS patients have large
cytogenetic deletion - 4 have uniparental disomy
- 4 have mutations in the imprinting centre (IC)
- 5 remaining, screened for mutations in the AS
gene, UBE3A (E6AP) (50 familial, 10 sporadic)
31AS Oppositely Imprinted to PWS
32Recurrence risk
- typical large deletions are de novo and are
expected to have less than 1 risk - paternal UPD, (no parental translocation), less
than 1 - transmission of a structurally or functionally
unbalanced chromosome complement can lead to
15q11-q13 deletions or to UPD and will result in
case-specific recurrence risks. - no large deletion or UPD, probably 50 due to
maternal IC or UBE3A mutation see overhead - Risks confounded by mosaicism
33UBE3A (E6AP) and AS
- UBE3A (ubiquitin protein ligase) complex
expression patterns. - 5 end of gene alternatively spliced in a
variety of human tissue cell lines and in human
foetal tissues including brain - gt 7 isoforms have been identified monoallelic
expression is tissue specific and isoform
specific - Human fibroblast and lymphoblast tissues and also
adult mouse tissues show biallelic expression.
34Monoallelic expression of UBE3A
- Monoallelic expression of an isoform found in
mouse brain tissue - depression of expression is also evident in the
hippocampus of a paternal UPD mouse - Evidence for decrease of expression in human
brain - Clinical description of AS indicates a
developmental brain disorder and so differential
expression of the gene would be expected in brain
tissue.
35UBE3A Has Even More Complex Splicing
- Normal UBE3A decreased in AS brain (MATERNAL)
- A new larger transcript decreased in PW brain
(PATERNAL) - Larger transcript is antisense and spans half
UBE3A with additional down stream sequence
36- Also another sense strand was detected which lies
in between the 2nd and 3rd polyadenylation signal
of UBE3A - Imprinted and transcribed in the same way as
UBE3A - All other tissues antisense transcript not
expressed - The expression of the antisense transcript in
brain may force the UBE3A transcript to be
monoallelic in brain - Some as yet uncharacterised AS patients could
have a mutation in either the down stream sense
transcript or the antisense transcript, see
overhead
37Mouse models
- Mouse models have been used to identify imprinted
regions by engineering UPDs for mouse
chromosomes, in part or in full - Extensive mapping of imprinted mouse genes and
their human homologues has been undertaken
http//www.mgu.har.mrc.ac.uk/imprinting
38Similarities to Human Disease
- AS mouse Neuro behavoural differences, mild
ataxia, abnormal limb clasping, hyperactivity,
diminished brain weight (10 smaller) - The PWS mouse increase in postnatal loss, small
skeleton, grossly obese by 6 months
39Differences to Human disease
- AS mouse no detection of language difficulties
(obviously), mouse also showed gross obesity -
could be present in a subset of AS patients as
late onset - PWS mouse no detection of mild mental
retardation.
40Usefulness of AS Mouse Model
- When gene was identified, AS mouse brains could
be looked at and a monoallelically expressed
transcript of UBE3A was found to be decreased as
compared to the normal and the PWS mouse
41Outstanding questions
- How and when during germline development are old
imprints removed and new ones introduced? - Which demethylating activities and chromatin
factors are involved? - How does the spreading of epigenetic information
in clusters work, - germline-specific,
postzygotic phenomenon or both? - How are imprints maintained when there is
genome-wide active and passive demethylation in
the early embryo? - How many fundamentally different arrangements of
imprinted genes and imprinting control elements
are there in the genome?
42Cont
- How conserved is imprinting between mammalian
species? - How precisely do imprinted genes affect
extraembryonic and embryonic development, and the
nutritional exchange with the mother? - Are there interactions of imprinted genes
(particularly antagonistic ones) in known, or in
novel, physiological pathways? - In addition to growth and behaviour, are there
other developmental processes and mechanisms in
which imprinted genes have a decisive role, and
how will these fit with evolutionary theories?