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First published online January 13, 2009
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.032060



CeMM - Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Dr Bohr-Gasse 9/4, Vienna Biocenter, A-1030 Vienna, Austria.
Author for correspondence (e-mail:
denise.barlow{at}univie.ac.at)
Accepted 1 December 2008
| SUMMARY |
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Key words: Embryonic stem (ES) cells, Epigenetics, Genomic imprinting, ES in vitro imprinting model, ncRNA, Histone modifications, DNA methylation, Allele-specific expression, Airn (Air)
| INTRODUCTION |
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100 mammalian genes
(Solter, 2006
The Igf2r imprinted cluster contains three maternally expressed
mRNA genes (Igf2r, Slc22a2 and Slc22a3) that are silenced on
the paternal allele by expression of the Airn ncRNA
(Sleutels et al., 2002
)
(formerly named Air, now renamed Airn by the HUGO
Nomenclature Committee) (Fig.
1A). The Airn promoter lies in an antisense orientation
in Igf2r intron 2. The resultant 108 kb Airn transcript,
which is nuclear localised and largely unspliced, overlaps the 5' part
of Igf2r but lies more than 200 kb upstream of Slc22a2 and
Slc22a3 (Seidl et al.,
2006
). The maternal Airn promoter, which lies in a 3.65
kb BamHI-PacI fragment genetically defined as the ICE, is
ubiquitously repressed by a DNA methylation imprint acquired in oocytes
(Stoger et al., 1993
;
Zwart et al., 2001
).
Airn-mediated silencing of Igf2r is seen throughout the
post-implantation embryo and adult, with the exception of post-mitotic neurons
(Yamasaki et al., 2005
), but
its silencing effects on Slc22a2 and Slc22a3 appear to be
restricted to the trophoblast placenta
(Zwart et al., 2001
).
Paternal-specific silencing of Igf2r, but not of Slc22a2 and
Slc22a3, is accompanied by gain of promoter DNA methylation, but,
surprisingly, this methylation mark is not necessary for Igf2r
silencing (Li et al., 1993
;
Seidl et al., 2006
).
Genomic imprinting consists of distinct developmental stages: imprint
acquisition in gametes, onset of imprinted expression in early embryos,
maintenance of imprinted expression in differentiated cells and, finally,
imprint erasure in germ cells of early embryos
(Barlow and Bartolomei, 2007
).
Most studies investigating these processes have involved targeted
manipulations in an in vivo mouse model - a long-term and laborious procedure.
However, some stages in genomic imprinting are potentially amenable to in
vitro analysis. Undifferentiated embryonic stem (ES) cells are a cell culture
derivative of the pluripotent blastocyst inner cell mass that can provide an
in vitro model of early embryonic development
(Evans, 2005
). In vitro
differentiation of female ES cells has been used to study X-chromosome
inactivation in mammals (Heard et al.,
2004
; Wutz, 2007
).
Changes in Xist ncRNA expression, coating of the inactive
X-chromosome by Xist, gain of histone modifications and DNA
methylation, are all recapitulated in correct temporal order during ES cell
differentiation. Similarities between X-inactivation and imprinted expression
indicate that ES cells may also provide a model in which to investigate
genomic imprinting (Reik and Lewis,
2005
). ES cells might be particularly useful to analyze the onset
of Igf2r imprinted expression because undifferentiated ES cells
express Igf2r biallelically and lack Airn ncRNA expression
(Braidotti et al., 2004
;
Wang et al., 1994
). This
mimics the in vivo situation, as pre-implantation embryos express
Igf2r biallelically and lack Airn in the blastocyst inner
cell mass, whereas post-implantation embryos gain imprinted Igf2r
expression between 4.5 and 6.5 days post-coitum (dpc)
(Lerchner and Barlow, 1997
;
Szabo and Mann, 1995
;
Terranova et al., 2008
). Thus,
ES cell in vitro differentiation could provide a reliable model in which to
examine the developmental onset and maintenance of imprinted Igf2r
expression.
Recent progress in the reprogramming of somatic cells to pluripotent
embryonic-like cells has focussed interest on understanding epigenetic gene
regulation in ES cells (Jaenisch and
Young, 2008
). Histone modifications and DNA methylation have been
shown to undergo dynamic changes upon ES cell differentiation
(Meshorer and Misteli, 2006
).
For example, ES cells are globally deficient in DNA methylation and appear
insensitive to a lack of DNA methyltransferases, but show the reverse
behaviour upon differentiation (Meshorer
and Misteli, 2006
). However, the role played by epigenetic
modifications in regulating ES cell pluripotency is not fully understood
because, in contrast to differentiated cells, they lack a clear correlation
between expression status and the epigenetic modifications typically
associated with expressed or silent genes. For example, when silent, key
developmental genes are marked both by repressive H3K27me3 histone
modifications and by active H3K4me3 modifications (so-called bivalent domains)
(Azuara et al., 2006
;
Lee et al., 2007
). It was also
shown recently that in undifferentiated ES cells, peaks of H3K4me3 mark all
CpG island promoters irrespective of expression state
(Guenther et al., 2007
).
Genomic imprinting is one of the clearest examples of epigenetic gene
regulation and could provide a platform to better understand the role played
by epigenetic modifications during in vitro reprogramming and differentiation
of ES cells.
Here, we follow the dynamics of Igf2r and Airn imprinted
expression during mouse ES cell differentiation. Because several reports have
shown that imprinted expression can be disturbed in inter- and intraspecies
crosses, possibly owing to cis-regulatory polymorphisms
(Jiang et al., 1998
;
Shi et al., 2005
), we used
inbred ES cells with a polymorphism introduced into our gene of interest. We
show that Igf2r is biallelically expressed in undifferentiated ES
cells and that activation of Airn ncRNA expression in differentiating
ES cells coincides with gain of imprinted Igf2r expression. This is
accompanied by characteristic epigenetic changes, including gain of DNA
methylation and H3K9me3. Unexpectedly, even though the paternal Igf2r
promoter gains repressive epigenetic modifications it continues to be
expressed at similar levels throughout ES cell differentiation, while
expression of the maternal Igf2r promoter increases up to 10-fold.
Thus, contrary to expectation, we show that the Airn ncRNA induces
imprinted Igf2r expression not by silencing the paternal
Igf2r promoter, but by creating an expression bias between the two
parental alleles.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plasmid construction
The S12 targeting vector was constructed by ligation of a 5 kb
BstXI-Eco47III fragment
(Mm.Build-37/Chr.17:12909688-12914937) into the EcoRV site, and
diphtheria toxin fragment A (DTA) ligated into the SmaI site, of
pBluescript KS. The C-to-T change that mutates the exon 12 PstI site
(bp:12912731) was generated with the QuikChange XL Site-Directed Mutagenesis
Kit (Stratagene). The selection cassette Tk-Neo-loxP511 was introduced into
the BsrGI site in intron 11 (bp:12913929).
Allele-specific quantitative (Q) PCR
DNase I-treated RNA was assayed in duplicate or triplicate and normalised
to cyclophilin A (peptidylprolyl isomerase A). Forward primers: MUTSEF
(5'-CTGGCCTTCCCCTCCTGT-3') detects the mutated allele, whereas
WTSEF (5'-TGGCCTTCCCCTCCTGC-3') detects the wild-type allele.
Common reverse primer: GESER2 (5'-GCTATGACCTGTCTGTGTTGGCT-3').
QPCR was performed using the Power SYBR Green PCR Mastermix (Applied
Biosystems), with 9 mM MgCl2 and 100 nM primers. Cycling: 2 minutes
at 50°C, 10 minutes at 95°C, then 40 cycles of 15 seconds at 95°C
and 1 minute at 64°C.
Southern blotting
Standard conditions were used. Probes: EEi:AJ249895:94104-99081,
NEi:AJ249895:98070-99081, BEi:AJ249895:97090-99081,
MEi:AJ249895:126086-127237, X12:Mm.Build-37/Chr.17:12916453-12917573,
MSi:AJ249895:126087-127237,
Oct4a:Mm.Build-37/Chr.17:35,643,244-35,644,955.
RNase protection and northern blots
Standard conditions were used. RPAIII Kit (Ambion) probes:
AirF3b/AJ249895:100185-100446, Igf2rex34/NM_010515:4869-5002,
Cycl/:Ambion7675. Northern probes: HX/NM_010515:1001-8877,
Airp105/AJ249895:115522-116522, Oct4:(X52437:21-354).
Real-time QPCR
Real-time QPCR was performed as described
(Seidl et al., 2006
) (details
available upon request) using the following primers and probes [5' to
3'; F, forward primer; TM, Taqman probe (Applied Biosystems); R, reverse
primer]:
Airn QPCR: F-GACCAGTTCCGCCCGTTT, TM-TACAAGTGATTATTAACTCCACGCCAGCCTCA, R-GCAAGACCACAAAATATTGAAAAGAC;
Igf2rex48 QPCR: F-TCCTACAAGTACTCAAAGGTCAGCAA, TM-CCAAGACTAGGCAAGGACGGGCAAGA, R-GCGGTTGGTGGTGATATGG;
Igf2rex4/5 QPCR: F-GACTACTGCAGCCTGCAAGAAA, TM-ACATATTTAAAGCTGATAAGGAGGTACCATGCTATGCA, R-AATCATGCTTCTGTAACTTGTCATCAA;
Cyclophilin A QPCR: F-AGGGTTCCTCCTTTCACAGAATT, TM-TCGTGGATCTGACGTGCCGCC, R-GTGCCATTATGGCGTGTAAAGT;
Oct4 QPCR: F-ACCTTCAGGAGATATGCAAATCG, TM-AGACCCTGGTGCAGGCCCGG, R-TTCTCAATGCTAGTTCGTTCGCTTT;
Fgf5 QPCR: F-AACTCCATGCAAGTGCCAAAT, TM-TACGGATGACTGTAAGTTCAGGGAGAGATTCCA, R-GGACGCATAGGTATTATAGCTGTTTTC;
Gata4 QPCR: F-CGCTGTGGCGTCGTAATG, TM-AGCCTGTATGTAATGCCTGCGGCCTC, R-GGAACCCCATGGAGCTTCAT;
Slc22a2 QPCR: F-GGAAATCGGTGCCAGTCTC, TM-CTTCAGAGCCTGACGGCAGATGAGGA, R-AAGGGTTCAATTTCATGCCAGT; and
Slc22a3 QPCR: F-GAAATGCACGCTCATCCTTATG, TM-TTGCTTGGTTCACGAGCGCCGT, R-CAGGCGCATGACAAGTCCTT.
Native chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)
ChIP was performed as described (Regha
et al., 2007
) using the antibodies and primers listed therein.
|
| RESULTS |
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The onset of Airn expression coincides with upregulation of Igf2r expression
We next determined the expression of genes from the imprinted
Igf2r cluster. Based on previous data showing that Igf2r is
biallelically expressed in undifferentiated ES cells and that Airn
ncRNA expression is restricted to differentiated ES cells
(Braidotti et al., 2004
;
Wang et al., 1994
), we
anticipated that Igf2r expression would decrease during ES cell
differentiation, as Airn expression silences the paternal
Igf2r promoter. Since QPCR only measures relative differences in gene
expression, we first used RNase protection to assess non-amplified RNA levels.
Fig. 1C shows that low-level
Igf2r expression is detected in undifferentiated CCE and D3 ES cells
(lane 0). However, instead of the anticipated decrease, we found that
Igf2r was strongly upregulated during differentiation, with the most
prominent increase between days 3 and 4 of RA treatment
(Fig. 1C). The Airn
ncRNA behaved as anticipated and was absent from undifferentiated cells (lane
0 is overexposed to show the absence of Airn), then sharply increased
between days 3 and 4 of RA treatment. Notably, the levels of Igf2r
and Airn increase during the same time window as when the
differentiation markers change (Fig.
1B), and both also show a sharp increase in expression during days
3-4. The amount of stable Igf2r mRNA is greater than that of
Airn ncRNA, in agreement with their differential stability
(Seidl et al., 2006
).
|
5-fold (from
20 to 100) and
Airn increased
100-fold (from background to 100) by day 5 of RA
treatment (Fig. 1D and see Fig.
S1B, left panel, in the supplementary material) or by day 8 of EB
differentiation (see Fig. S1C in the supplementary material). Parallel
upregulation of a ncRNA with one mRNA is also seen in the Kcnq1 and
Igf2 imprinted clusters during ES cell differentiation (see Fig. S2
in the supplementary material). Expression of Slc22a2 and
Slc22a3 was undetectable by QPCR until days 2-3 of differentiation
and then increased with similar kinetics to Igf2r and Airn
(Fig. 1E and see Fig. S1B,D in
the supplementary material). Although expression of both Slc22a2 and
Slc22a3 is restricted to the trophoblast placenta
(Zwart et al., 2001Imprinted Igf2r expression in differentiated cells could result from transcriptional or post-transcriptional events. RNA FISH using intronic probes detects nascent transcription; however, probes that contain exons will also detect accumulated transcripts. In day-5 RA-treated ES cells, an intronic RNA FISH signal was detected in 17% of cells, and the majority (88%) of positive cells showed single-spot signals (Fig. 1F). Thus, imprinted expression of Igf2r arises from transcriptional differences between the two parental alleles.
Allele-specific assay of Igf2r expression during ES cell differentiation
Since Igf2r unexpectedly showed increased expression during ES
cell differentiation, we used homologous recombination to generate an inbred
ES cell line carrying a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) to analyze
allele-specific Igf2r expression
(Fig. 2). The SNP in
Igf2r exon 12 mutated a PstI site but maintained the reading
frame. To identify the parental origin of the targeted allele, we made use of
the maternal-specific DNA methylation imprint on the ICE that results in a
diagnostic 21.9 kb band from a paternally targeted allele but not from a
maternally targeted allele, after digestion with EcoRV and the
methyl-sensitive MluI. One maternally targeted cell line (S12/+) and
one paternally targeted cell line (+/S12) are shown in
Fig. 2C (note that the maternal
allele is written on the left side throughout the text). We then used an
allele-specific QPCR assay that distinguishes the exon 12 SNP to analyze a
maternally targeted and a paternally targeted ES line for Igf2r
expression. Fig. 3A shows the
specificity of the allele-specific assay using plasmids containing cDNA with
(S12) or without (WT) the SNP, indicating that the compatible QPCR assay
reaches the detection threshold at least seven Ct cycles earlier than the
incompatible assay. As shown in Fig.
3B, in both +/S12 and S12/+ cells, the ratio of maternal to
paternal Igf2r expression increased from 1:1 to between 4:1 and 10:1
in differentiated cells. The relative increase in maternal Igf2r
expression during ES differentiation varied between different experiments, but
always coincided with the onset of Airn upregulation as shown in
Fig. 1D.
Persistent paternal-specific Igf2r expression in differentiated ES cells
In allele-specific QPCR assays, the maternal to paternal Igf2r
ratio did not exceed 10:1 in differentiated cells, even though the calculated
specificity for the QPCR SNP assay was at least 50:1. To examine whether this
might indicate incomplete silencing of the paternal Igf2r promoter in
differentiated cells, we used D3 ES cells with a lacZ-polyA
termination signal targeted into exon 1 that truncates the Igf2r mRNA
(Wang et al., 1994
). For
northern blot analysis, we first used an Igf2r-specific probe
downstream to exon 1 that only detects the wild-type parental allele
(Fig. 3C). The +/lacZ
cells showed strong upregulation of the wild-type maternal Igf2r
allele during differentiation. However, the lacZ/+ cells also showed
that wild-type paternal Igf2r expression is maintained at the same
level throughout differentiation, and even increases slightly at day 5.
Although this could, unexpectedly, indicate that the paternal allele is not
silenced during differentiation, we noted that control double-knockout cells
(lacZ/lacZ), which should lack all Igf2r
expression, showed traces of Igf2r. This arises from contaminating
wild-type feeder cells that persist at early time points despite feeder
depletion. We therefore repeated the analysis using IPdel/Thp feeder cells,
which completely lack Igf2r expression because the maternal allele
carries an Igf2r promoter deletion and the paternal allele carries a
6 Mbp deletion of the whole imprinted cluster
(Sleutels et al., 2003
).
Northern blots (Fig. 3D) showed
that Igf2r is absent from lacZ/lacZ ES cells grown
on IPdel/Thp feeder cells, and revealed approximately equal expression of the
maternal and paternal Igf2r alleles in undifferentiated ES cells.
Igf2r expression in these cells was quantified by QPCR, which showed
that paternal Igf2r expression in lacZ/+ ES cells is indeed
present throughout differentiation and at approximately constant levels until
day 4, with a 2-fold increase at day 5 of RA treatment
(Fig. 3E). By contrast, the
maternal Igf2r allele (+/lacZ) was upregulated beginning at
day 2 of RA treatment and increased sharply between days 4 and 5. Together,
these results unexpectedly indicate that imprinted Igf2r expression
occurs not by silencing the paternal allele, but by creating an expression
bias between the two parental alleles.
Airn expression correlates with de novo DNA methylation of the paternal Igf2r promoter
The above result shows that the paternal Igf2r allele maintains
the same expression level during ES cell differentiation. Since the paternal
Igf2r promoter in 13.5 dpc embryos displays partial DNA methylation
(Stoger et al., 1993
), we
tested whether methylation is also acquired in differentiated ES cells.
Fig. 4 shows that in
undifferentiated ES cells, the Igf2r promoter is unmethylated on both
parental alleles, in agreement with the above data showing bi-parental
Igf2r expression (Fig.
4A). In differentiated cells, a faint band indicative of a
methylated Igf2r promoter was observed after day 3 of RA treatment,
the period when Igf2r expression starts to be upregulated and
Airn is induced. This methylated Igf2r band remained faint
in RA-treated cells, but at day 14 of EB differentiation the intensity of the
methylated and unmethylated Igf2r bands was similar (quantified in
Fig. 4B), indicating complete
methylation of the paternal allele (see the NIH3T3 lane, which shows the equal
methylated and unmethylated signals). The Airn promoter is
continuously modified by a maternal-specific DNA methylation imprint from the
oocyte stage onwards, which silences the Airn ncRNA
(Seidl et al., 2006
). We
confirmed that this methylation imprint is present and stably maintained
during ES cell differentiation (Fig.
4A). As the Oct4 gene has been shown to gain DNA
methylation during ES cell differentiation
(Hattori et al., 2004
), we
tested whether the kinetics of methylation gain were similar to those observed
for the paternal Igf2r promoter.
Fig. 4C (top panel) shows that
differentiating CCE ES cells gained low-level Oct4 methylation by day
2 and that this increased markedly during days 3 to 5, attaining similar
levels to those seen in tail DNA. Igf2r methylation has similar
kinetics, with a faint methylated band visible by day 3 (dashed line).
However, in contrast to Oct4, Igf2r methylation was still partial by
day 5 by comparison with tail DNA, which contains a fully methylated paternal
allele.
Changes in histone modifications accompany the onset of Igf2r imprinted expression
We have previously shown in 13.5 dpc mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs)
(which show a maternal to paternal Igf2r expression ratio of 80:1,
see Fig. S3 in the supplementary material) that the silent paternal
Igf2r promoter and the silent maternal Airn promoter are
each modified by a repressive `heterochromatin' peak composed of
H3K9me3/H4K20me3/HP1β, but are devoid of repressive H3K27me3 marks
(Regha et al., 2007
). In MEFs,
the expressed maternal Igf2r and paternal Airn promoters
lack repressive marks and are modified only by active histone marks (H3K4me2/3
and H3K9Ac). We therefore used chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) of two
active (H3K4me2, H3K9Ac) and two repressive (H3K27me3, H3K9me3) histone marks
to test whether these modifications arise during ES cell differentiation.
Fig. 5B depicts the expression
of Igf2r and Airn in undifferentiated and differentiated ES
cells, as described above. Fig.
5C-H shows ChIP analysis of the Igf2r promoter region
using 12 primer pairs (the arrow indicates the transcription start site and
direction). In undifferentiated ES cells (left panel), the Igf2r
promoter is enriched for H3K27me3 on both sides of the transcription start
site (Fig. 5D); however, this
modification is lost in differentiated ES cells (right panel). H3K9Ac shows
the inverse pattern, with enrichment in differentiated ES cells, mainly
downstream of the transcription start (Fig.
5E). H3K4me2 is present downstream of the Igf2r
transcription start in undifferentiated ES cells, but moves further upstream
in differentiated cells (Fig.
5G). H3K9me3 is mostly absent from Igf2r in
undifferentiated ES cells, but is enriched in differentiated ES cells, mainly
downstream of the transcription start site
(Fig. 5H).
|
We then examined the same samples by QPCR.
Fig. 5O demonstrates that
H3K27me3 is present only in undifferentiated ES cells that lack imprinted
Igf2r/Airn expression and is absent (i.e. signals are similar to mock
ChIP levels, arrows) in differentiated ES cells that have imprinted
expression. Thus, differentiated ES cells lack a correlation between H3K27me3
and imprinted Igf2r/Airn expression, as previously shown for 13.5 dpc
MEFs (Regha et al., 2007
).
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
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|---|
Control of imprinted gene expression by DNA methylation
DNA methylation is a late event relative to imprinted expression:
methylation is incomplete at the time when differentiated ES cells show
maximum differences between maternal and paternal Igf2r expression.
This is consistent with the ongoing reassessment of the biological role of DNA
methylation, which indicates that it largely modifies promoters already
downregulated by other means (Suzuki and
Bird, 2008
). The lack of a direct role for promoter methylation in
inducing Igf2r imprinted expression is supported by experiments
demonstrating that Igf2r is silenced, but Airn is
upregulated, in embryos globally deficient in DNA methylation
(Li et al., 1993
;
Seidl et al., 2006
). Note that
in this and other imprinted gene clusters, DNA methylation can be viewed as
repressing a repressor (e.g. the Airn promoter) on one parental
chromosome. The differential behaviour of the Igf2r and Airn
promoters in response to global demethylation indicates an inequality between
somatic DNA methylation imprints that coincide with the gain of imprinted
expression on one parental chromosome, and gametic DNA methylation imprints
that modify the ICE on the other parental chromosome. The former appear to be
a consequence of imprinted expression, whereas the latter have been shown to
directly repress ICE activity and thereby regulate imprinted gene expression
(Barlow and Bartolomei, 2007
).
The molecular basis of the inequality between gametic-derived and
somatic-derived DNA methylation imprints is not yet clear, but might reflect
the ability of the ICE to recruit accessory proteins, such as the recently
described KRAB zinc-finger ZFP57 protein
(Li et al., 2008
).
|
|
An in vitro ES system for studying epigenetic gene regulation
Genomic imprinting is a well-studied model of epigenetic gene regulation
that has identified a role for DNA methylation in regulating cis-acting
insulator elements and macro ncRNA CpG island promoters. We show here that in
vitro ES cell differentiation can faithfully mimic key developmental steps as
imprinted expression is established (see
Fig. 6 for an in vivo and in
vitro comparison). Maternal methylation of the ICE, which is the imprint for
the Igf2r cluster and acquired in oocytes and lost in 12.5 dpc germ
cells (Labosky et al., 1994
;
Stoger et al., 1993
), cannot
be studied in an ES cell model system that mimics events in embryonic somatic
cells. However, the ICE gametic methylation imprint is stably maintained
during early embryonic development and we show that it is similarly maintained
during ES cell differentiation (Fig.
4). The switch from non-imprinted to imprinted expression is also
modelled by an in vitro ES system. As we show here, undifferentiated ES cells
express Igf2r biallelically in a similar manner to pre-implantation
embryos (Lerchner and Barlow,
1997
; Stoger et al.,
1993
; Szabo and Mann,
1995
). The onset of imprinted Igf2r expression that takes
place between 4.5 and 6.5 dpc in the embryo
(Lerchner and Barlow, 1997
) is
also recapitulated by the gain of imprinted expression as ES cells
differentiate (Fig. 3).
Similarly, dynamic changes in histone modifications and gain of methylation on
the Igf2r promoter that have been shown to be parental specific in
MEF cells (Fournier et al.,
2002
; Regha et al.,
2007
) are recapitulated in differentiating ES cells
(Fig. 5). One drawback to an ES
model system is that it cannot be used to study genes that show placental
trophoblast-specific imprinted expression, as ES cells are established from
the blastocyst inner cell mass, which does not contribute to the trophoblast.
However, alternative stem cells, derived from trophectoderm and primitive
endoderm lineages, are available and these might prove useful models of
placental trophoblast imprinted expression
(Rossant, 2007
). Thus, we show
that ES cell differentiation offers a reliable model system in which to
dissect some stages of genomic imprinting. In addition, analysis of the
epigenetic regulation of imprinted genes can itself provide valuable
information about existing epigenetic mechanisms related to the control of
pluripotency in stem cell populations. For example, we have also shown that
absence of the Airn and H19 ncRNAs, as well as equal
biallelic expression of Igf2r, are stringent markers of
undifferentiated pluripotent ES cells.
Persistent expression of the `silent' allele of an imprinted gene
Imprinted expression is generally interpreted as an epigenetic silencing
event (Solter, 2006
). However,
we show that the paternal Igf2r allele maintains persistent low-level
expression despite the gain of DNA methylation and repressive H3K9me3 histone
modifications. Although we use an ES cell in vitro differentiation system, we
consider that this accurately reflects imprinted expression because
post-implantation mouse embryos similarly show persistent paternal expression
in some tissues (Lerchner and Barlow,
1997
). In addition, 13.5 dpc MEF cells with complete DNA
methylation on the paternal promoter also show persistent paternal
Igf2r expression that is readily detected in northern blots and by
non-quantitative PCR (see Fig. S3 in the supplementary material). Several
reports have also noted expression of the `silent' allele of an imprinted
gene, including Igf2 (Sasaki et
al., 1992
) and genes in the Kcnq1, Dlk1 and
Sgce-Peg10 imprinted clusters (da
Rocha et al., 2007
; Fitzpatrick
et al., 2002
; Ono et al.,
2003
). A recent review has suggested that the majority of
imprinted genes might actually show preferential, rather than exclusive,
parental-specific expression (Khatib,
2007
).
Although the Airn ncRNA has traditionally been viewed as inducing
paternal-specific silencing of Igf2r, our data allow an alternative
epigenetic regulation model (Fig.
6). In model 1, we propose that Airn does not silence the
paternal Igf2r promoter but instead acts to prevent its upregulation.
We advocate this maternal-specific upregulation model because we observe that
the maternal Igf2r allele, which contains the silent methylated
Airn promoter, shows dramatic upregulation during ES cells
differentiation. On the paternal chromosome, the unmethylated Airn
promoter is upregulated and low-level paternal Igf2r expression is
unchanged. The Airn ncRNA would act in this model to prevent the gain
of activating epigenetic marks on either the paternal Igf2r promoter
or its enhancers. It is interesting, in view of this model, that H3K9me3 has
been shown to block active histone marks such as H3K9Ac and H3Ser10P
(Rea et al., 2000
). This
maternal-specific upregulation model is supported by the parallel kinetics of
Igf2r and Airn upregulation and our previous analysis of
DNase I hypersensitive sites in this region, which concluded that the
Igf2r and Airn promoters share the same cis-acting
regulatory elements, albeit on different parental chromosomes
(Pauler et al., 2005
). In
model 2, we propose the more classical viewpoint that Airn does
silence the paternal Igf2r promoter but a small percentage of cells,
in some unknown stochastic way, escape silencing and express high levels of
Igf2r biallelically. Analysis of single-cell Igf2r
transcription would distinguish between these two models. However, RNA FISH is
currently insufficiently sensitive to detect either the low-level
Igf2r expression seen in undifferentiated ES cells (data not shown),
or the full biallelic expression seen in differentiated ES cells that lack a
functional Airn ncRNA (Stricker
et al., 2008
). Thus, we cannot directly distinguish between
persistent low-level expression of the paternal Igf2r allele in all
cells in the population as proposed by model 1 and a low percentage of cells
in the population that express Igf2r biallelically as proposed by
model 2. Both models, however, accommodate the view that repressive marks may
follow the lack of activation and play accessory roles in regulating the
paternal Igf2r promoter, as well as our recent proposal that
Airn transcription, and not the Airn ncRNA itself, is
important for its function (Pauler et al.,
2007
). The demonstration here that the gain of imprinted
expression can be mimicked in vitro in differentiating ES cells provides a
valuable tool with which to determine whether the Airn ncRNA acts by
blocking the access of activating epigenetic marks, or by recruiting
repressive epigenetic marks, to induce imprinted Igf2r
expression.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material for this article is available at
http://dev.biologists.org/cgi/content/full/136/3/437/DC1
| Footnotes |
|---|
* These authors contributed equally to this work ![]()
Current address: Wellcome Trust Centre for Stem Cell Research, University
of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1QR, UK ![]()
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