Age‐related and species‐specific methylation changes in the protein‐coding marmoset sperm epigenome

Author:

Dittrich Marcus12,Bernhardt Laura1,Penfold Christopher A.34,Boroviak Thorsten E.345,Drummer Charis67,Behr Rüdiger67,Müller Tobias2,Haaf Thomas1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Human Genetics Julius Maximilians University Würzburg Germany

2. Department of Bioinformatics Julius Maximilians University Würzburg Germany

3. Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

4. Centre for Trophoblast Research University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

5. Wellcome Trust – Medical Research Council Stem Cell Institute, Jeffrey Cheah Biomedical Centre University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

6. Platform Degenerative Diseases German Primate Center‐Leibniz Institute for Primate Research Göttingen Germany

7. DZHK (German Centre for Cardiovascular Research) Göttingen Germany

Abstract

AbstractThe sperm epigenome is thought to affect the developmental programming of the resulting embryo, influencing health and disease in later life. Age‐related methylation changes in the sperm of old fathers may mediate the increased risks for reproductive and offspring medical problems. The impact of paternal age on sperm methylation has been extensively studied in humans and, to a lesser extent, in rodents and cattle. Here, we performed a comparative analysis of paternal age effects on protein‐coding genes in the human and marmoset sperm methylomes. The marmoset has gained growing importance as a non‐human primate model of aging and age‐related diseases. Using reduced representation bisulfite sequencing, we identified age‐related differentially methylated transcription start site (ageTSS) regions in 204 marmoset and 27 human genes. The direction of methylation changes was the opposite, increasing with age in marmosets and decreasing in humans. None of the identified ageTSS was differentially methylated in both species. Although the average methylation levels of all TSS regions were highly correlated between marmosets and humans, with the majority of TSS being hypomethylated in sperm, more than 300 protein‐coding genes were endowed with species‐specifically (hypo)methylated TSS. Several genes of the glycosphingolipid (GSL) biosynthesis pathway, which plays a role in embryonic stem cell differentiation and regulation of development, were hypomethylated (<5%) in human and fully methylated (>95%) in marmoset sperm. The expression levels and patterns of defined sets of GSL genes differed considerably between human and marmoset pre‐implantation embryo stages and blastocyst tissues, respectively.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Reference46 articles.

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