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Vol. 10, Issue 11, 1660-1663, November 2000
INSIGHT/OUTLOOK
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ARTICLE |
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Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic chromosomal
modification in the germ line that leads to preferential expression of
one of the two parental alleles in a parent-of-origin-specific manner. A number of recent studies suggest that genomic imprinting is mediated
by a set of elements in distinct chromosomal regions that have been
termed imprinting centers (IC). By definition, the IC coordinate three
activities: the establishment of imprint marks, the maintenance
of these imprint marks throughout development, and the
implementation of the preferential expression from a specific parental
allele (for review, see Ben-Porath and Cedar 2000
).
At least four major imprinting models that incorporate recent discoveries have been elucidated: First, the sense/antisense competition model for preferential allelic expression, as exemplified by studies examining the regulation of Igf2r and its associated antisense on mouse chromosome 17 (Box 1; Fig. 1). Second, the enhancer/chromosomal insulation model developed on the basis of the reciprocal imprinting of Igf2/H19 in human and in mouse (Box 2; Fig. 2A). Third, the bipartite IC model, which describes the regulation of multiple imprinted genes in a 2-Mb Prader-Willi syndrome/Angelman syndrome(PWS-AS) region of human chromosome 15. Finally, the promoter-specific reciprocal-imprinting model as seen at the human and mouse Gnas locus (Box 2; Fig. 2B).
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To understand the mechanisms underlying genomic imprinting, a number of research groups have focused on the identification and characterization of the imprinting elements present in the various ICs. As the DNA sequence of the whole human genome is nearly complete and complete sequences of other species are or will soon be available, an entirely new strategy for understanding potential imprinting mechanisms has now become available. Sitting at one's computer, it will be possible to devise large-scale comparisons of genomic sequences within and/or between species that could yield new information on potentially important elements that govern preferential allelic expression.
In this issue, we see how two research groups (Wylie et al. 2000
;
Onyango et al. 2000
) have advanced our understanding of the mechanisms
of genomic imprinting by employing a comparative analysis of distinct
imprinting regions in human and mouse genes.
[For more information on comparative genome analysis and imprinting, see Okamura et al. in the December issue of Genome Research.]
Human Chromosome Regions Have Common Imprinting Elements
R. Jirtle and his colleagues at Duke University have identified two
reciprocally imprinted genes, DLK1 and GTL2, on human chromosome 14q32 (Wylie et al. 2000
). The cognate murine genes, Dlk1 and Gtl1, on mouse chromosome 12 are also linked
and reciprocally imprinted (Schmidt et al. 2000
; Takada et al. 2000
).
DLK1, which encodes a transmembrane protein with 6 EGF
(epidermal growth factor) repeat motifs, is paternally expressed. In
contrast, GTL2, which encodes an apparently nontranslated RNA,
is located 102 kb downstream of DLK1 and is expressed from the
maternal allele.
A functionally similar imprinted region that harbors two reciprocally imprinted genes, IGF2 and H19, has been extensively studied in both mouse and human (Box 2). There are striking similarities in the spatial, structural, and reciprocal imprinting characteristics of these two imprinted regions (IGF2/H19 on human chromosome 11p15 and DLK1/GTL2 on human chromosome 14q32). IGF2 is the paternally expressed gene, while the maternally expressed H19 encodes for a nontranslated RNA. These similarities have prompted the Duke group to further elucidate the IC elements on 14q32 region by making careful comparisons with the 11p15-imprinted region.
CTCF is a zinc finger protein implicated in the regulation of
chromosomal boundaries (Fig. 2A). In the mouse
Igf2/H19 region, CpG methylation in the CTCF binding
site eliminates binding of the enhancer-blocking CTCF, thereby allowing
expression of Igf2 from the paternal allele (Bell and
Felsenfeld 2000
; Hark et al. 2000
). Methylation analysis by bisulfite
sequencing revealed a differential methylation region (DMR) within 2 kb
upstream of GTL2, analogous to the silencer DMR1 of the IC on
the IGF2/H19 (Wylie et al. 2000
). A DMR in the
promoter region of DLK1 may correspond to the DMR in the
IGF2 gene (Constancia et al. 2000
). Interestingly, two unique
CTCF binding sites were found in the region one kilobase upstream of
GTL2. Bisulfite sequencing indicated that all CpG sites within
and outside the binding sites were hemimethylated (equal numbers of
methylated and unmethylated molecules), suggesting that CpG methylation
in this DMR may serve as an epigenetic switch to turn on/off the
enhancer-blocking activity of the IC by binding/unbinding the CTCF to
the unmethylated/methylated IC. In parallel with the enhancer/chromosomal-boundary model of reciprocal imprinting, Wylie et
al. (2000)
also found the same consensus sequence for two enhancer
elements as seen in IGF2/H19 ~10 kb downstream
from the GTL2 transcription site.
Wylie et al. (2000)
have presented an elegant approach combining
bioinformatics and experimental data on allelic expression and
bisulfite sequencing to elucidate a model for
DLK1/GTL2 reciprocal imprinting. The
DLK1/GTL2 and the IGF2/H19 regions
are located on different chromosomes (human 14q32 and 11p15; mouse
chromosomes 12 and 7), and they encode functionally diverse proteins
DLK-1 (or FA1) and IGF-II. The striking similarities in the imprinting characteristics of these two imprinting dyads suggest that many imprinting elements that are crucial for this type of reciprocal imprinting would be conserved in heterologous chromosomal locations within one species, as well as in orthologous regions between species.
The Structure of a 1-Mb Imprinted Region
Imprinted genes usually appear in pairs or clusters. As imprinting
often influences large chromosomal domains and may be regulated by more
than one (or by a bipartite) IC, comparison of larger imprinted domains
would pinpoint the crucial conserved, putative imprinting elements in
the ICs. In this issue, A. Feinberg (2000) and his colleagues at Johns
Hopkins University pioneered such an approach (Onyango et al. 2000
).
They performed a comparative analysis of a mouse 1-Mb imprinted region
that is orthologous to the human 11p15 domain. They constructed a BAC
contig containing ~1 Mb of the imprinted region on mouse chromosome
7. By comparing this region with its orthologous region on human
chromosome 11p15, they were able to identify 33 conserved CpG islands
(with sequence identity
50%) and 49 conserved nonexonic, non-CpG
island sequences (at least 70% sequence identity in 100 bp). This
group and others (Smilinich et al. 1999
; Paulsen et al. 2000
) have
previously shown that the human imprinted region harbors two imprinted
subdomains: the IGF2/H19 domain and the domain
centered around KvLQT1. These domains are separated by a
nonimprinted domain containing TSSC6-TAPA1-TSSC4-TRPC51. Similar findings pertain to the mouse.
All of the imprinted genes in the mouse contain at least two CpG
islands, except for the antisense Lit1 transcript, and they are clustered by intronic sequence elements that are conserved compared
with the human gene cluster. By doing this comparison, Onyango et al.
(2000)
identified two transcripts unique to mouse and five transcripts
unique to human. In the Kvlqt1 domain, a conserved novel
transcript, Tssc8, was identified; it lies within both the
Kvlqt1 and antisense Lit1 transcripts. Tssc8
has no obvious ORF and is transcribed in the opposite orientation from
Lit1, suggesting that it represents a novel antisense of an
antisense (Lit1) transcript. The imprinting status and
potential function of Tssc8 will require further
investigation. In addition, a mouse-specific paternally imprinted
transcript (Msuit) was discovered within the Kvlqt1
domain upstream of p57kip2.
Within the Igf2/H19 imprinted domain, they identified a novel conserved transcript 20 kb downstream of H19 and a novel Igf2-H19 interval transcript (called Ihit1) 20 kb upstream of H19 (Fig. 2A). Determination of the imprinting status of the novel downstream transcript will help elucidate the boundary of the imprinted/nonimprinted subdomains. The imprinting status of the interval transcript Ihit1 will provide further evidence to test the enhancer/chromosome boundary model in the Igf2/H19 imprinted domain (Box 2; Fig. 2A).
Future Developments
Sequence comparisons of large DNA regions across species have been
used recently to identify long-range regulatory elements that are
difficult to discover by conventional methods. A coordinate regulator
of interleukins 4, 13, and 5 was identified by large-scale sequence
comparison of ~1-Mb human 5q31 region and the murine chromosome 11 orthologous region (Loots et al. 2000
). By comparing imprinted domains
in the mouse to the orthologous human sequences, Onyango et al. (2000)
have identified multiple putative imprinting elements in the
Igf2/H19 and Kvlqt1 imprinted domains. The
full characterization of these putative imprinting elements will
undoubtedly be forthcoming. Further comparisons of orthologous
sequences in other mammals may help to pinpoint crucial imprinting
elements, as demonstrated by the recent innovative studies that have
elucidated the evolution of Igf2r imprinting (John et al.
2000
; Killian et al. 2000
).
An alternative yet complementary approach is to compare sequences of
similar imprinted domains located in different loci but within the same
genome, as reported by Wylie et al. (2000)
. In the next few years,
large-scale sequence comparisons of various imprinted regions within
one species and sequence comparisons across species are certain to
provide important new insights on various imprinting elements of the IC.
The IC implements preferential expression of a specific parental allele through imprint marks that are established in the germ line during gametogenesis and are maintained throughout development. Although the gametic imprints can be modulated by differential chromatin structure and/or by differential DNA replication timing, the primary imprints often involve DNA methylation.
Methylation of cytosine in CpG dinucleotides creates the fifth base, a
methylated cytosine, along with the four conventional DNA-building
blocks, G, A, T, and C. Bisulfite sequencing, as used by Wylie et al.
(2000)
and others (e.g., Vu et al. 2000
), helps to elucidate the
imprint marks of the methylated CpG in the IC.
The methylation of a CpG island in the promoter region of a gene is a
hallmark of gene regulation. The notion by Onyango et al. (2000)
that
almost all imprinted genes are associated with two or more CpG islands
suggests the complexity of the imprinting mechanisms. Gametic
methylation of IC elements located far away from the promoter region
can induce methylation/demethylation of the promoter CpG islands, thus
allowing "working from a distance." IC methylation acting in
cis and trans can coordinate sense/antisense transcripts through direct promoter methylation, chromatin remodeling (e.g., by recruiting histone deacetylase), or acting on a chromosomal boundary with enhancer-blocking activity.
DNA methylation plays a pivotal role in genomic imprinting. Further innovative developments in quantifying CpG methylation genome wide (such as the development of CpG DNA chips) or quantifying methylation at specific sites (such as methylation restriction [MR], MR-PCR; T.H. Vu and A.R. Hoffman, unpubl.) would be of great interest.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank all members of our laboratory for technical support, especially Tao Li for designing the figures. This paper was supported by NIH grant DK36054 and the Research Service of the Department of Veterans Affairs.
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FOOTNOTES |
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1 Corresponding authors.
E-MAIL thanvu{at}stanford.edu, arhoffman{at}leland.stanford.edu; FAX (650) 856-8024.
Article and publication are at www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.166200.
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