Author:
Van de Pette Mathew,Galvao Antonio,Millership Steven J.,To Wilson,Dimond Andrew,Prodani Chiara,McNamara Grainne,Bruno Ludovica,Sardini Alessandro,Webster Zoe,McGinty James,French Paul,Uren Anthony G.,Castillo-Fernandez Juan,John Rosalind M.,Ferguson-Smith Anne C.,Merkenschlager Matthias,Kelsey Gavin,Fisher Amanda G.
Abstract
AbstractTransmission of epigenetic information between generations occurs in nematodes, flies and plants, mediated by specialised small RNA pathways, histone H3K9me3, H3K27me3, H4K16ac and DNA methylation1-3. In higher vertebrates, epidemiological and experimental evidence supports similar trans-generational effects4,5 although the mechanisms that underpin these are incompletely understood6-9. We generated a luciferase reporter knock-in mouse for the imprinted Dlk1 locus, to visualise and track epigenetic fidelity across generations. We showed that exposure to high-fat diet (HFD) in pregnancy provokes sustained re-expression of the normally silent maternal Dlk1 allele in offspring, coincident with increased DNA methylation at the Dlk1 sDMR. Interestingly, maternal Dlk1 mis-expression was also evident in the next generation (F2), exclusively in animals derived from F1-exposed females. Oocytes from these females showed altered microRNA and gene expression, without any major changes in underlying DNA methylation, and correctly imprinted Dlk1 expression resumed in subsequent generations (F3 onwards). Our results reveal how canonical and non-canonical imprinting mechanisms enable the foetal epigenome to adapt to in utero challenge to modulate the properties of two successive generations of offspring.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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