Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260
Abstract
ABSTRACT
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
Sss
I (CpG) methylase. This singular maintenance of
RSVIgmyc
methylation preimposed with
Sss
I 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
Sss
I-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.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
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