Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Mol Cell Biol, July 1998, p. 4149-4156, Vol. 18, No. 7
Department of Biological Sciences, University
of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260
Received 14 November 1997/Returned for modification 18 January
1998/Accepted 8 April 1998
The inheritance of gametic methylation patterns is a critical event
in the imprinting of genes. In the case of the imprinted RSVIgmyc transgene, the methylation pattern in the
unfertilized egg is maintained by the early mouse embryo, whereas the
sperm's methylation pattern is lost in the early embryo. To
investigate the cis-acting requirements for this
preimplantation stage of genomic imprinting, we examined the fate of
different RSVIgmyc methylation patterns, preimposed on
RSVIgmyc and introduced into the mouse zygote by pronuclear
injection. RSVIgmyc methylation patterns with a low
percentage of methylated CpG dinucleotides, generated by using
bacterial cytosine methylases with four-base recognition sequences,
were lost in the early embryo. In contrast, methylation was maintained
when all CpG dinucleotides were methylated with the bacterial
SssI (CpG) methylase. This singular maintenance of
RSVIgmyc methylation preimposed with SssI
methylase appears to be specific to the early, undifferentiated embryo;
differentiated NIH 3T3 fibroblasts transfected with methylated versions
of RSVIgmyc maintained all methylation patterns,
independent of the level of preimposed methylation. The methylation
pattern of the RSVIgmyc allele in adult founder transgenic
mice that was produced by pronuclear injection of an
SssI-methylated construct could not be distinguished from
the maternal RSVIgmyc methylation pattern. Thus, a
highly methylated allele in adult mice, normally generated by
transmission of RSVIgmyc through the female germ line, was
also produced in founder transgenic mice by bypassing gametogenesis and
introducing a highly methylated RSVIgmyc into the mouse
zygote. These results suggest that RSVIgmyc methylation
itself is a cis-acting signal for the preimplantation
maintenance of the oocyte's methylation pattern and, therefore, a
cis-acting signal for RSVIgmyc imprinting. Furthermore, our inability to identify a sequence element within RSVIgmyc that was absolutely required for its imprinting
suggests that the extent of RSVIgmyc methylation, rather
than a particular pattern of methylation, is the principal feature of
this imprinting signal.
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
cis-Acting Signal for Inheritance of
Imprinted DNA Methylation Patterns in the Preimplantation Mouse
Embryo
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, 274 Crawford Hall, Fifth and Ruskin Streets, Pittsburgh, PA 15260. Phone: (412) 624-6987. Fax:
(412) 624-4759. E-mail: chaillet{at}vms.cis.pitt.edu.
This article has been cited by other articles:
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»