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A primary role of TET proteins in establishment and maintenance of De Novo bivalency at CpG islands
Authors:Lingchun Kong  Li Tan  Ruitu Lv  Zhennan Shi  Lijun Xiong  Feizhen Wu  Kimberlie Rabidou  Michael Smith  Celestine He  Lei Zhang  Yanyan Qian  Duan Ma  Fei Lan  Yang Shi  Yujiang Geno Shi
Institution:1Laboratory of Epigenetics, Institutes of Biomedical Sciences, Shanghai Medical College of Fudan University, Shanghai 200032, China;2Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Hypertension, Brigham and Women''s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA;3Division of Newborn Medicine, Children''s Hospital Boston and Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA
Abstract:Ten Eleven Translocation (TET) protein-catalyzed 5mC oxidation not only creates novel DNA modifications, such as 5hmC, but also initiates active or passive DNA demethylation. TETs’ role in the crosstalk with specific histone modifications, however, is largely elusive. Here, we show that TET2-mediated DNA demethylation plays a primary role in the de novo establishment and maintenance of H3K4me3/H3K27me3 bivalent domains underlying methylated DNA CpG islands (CGIs). Overexpression of wild type (WT), but not catalytic inactive mutant (Mut), TET2 in low-TET-expressing cells results in an increase in the level of 5hmC with accompanying DNA demethylation at a subset of CGIs. Most importantly, this alteration is sufficient in making de novo bivalent domains at these loci. Genome-wide analysis reveals that these de novo synthesized bivalent domains are largely associated with a subset of essential developmental gene promoters, which are located within CGIs and are previously silenced due to DNA methylation. On the other hand, deletion of Tet1 and Tet2 in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells results in an apparent loss of H3K27me3 at bivalent domains, which are associated with a particular set of key developmental gene promoters. Collectively, this study demonstrates the critical role of TET proteins in regulating the crosstalk between two key epigenetic mechanisms, DNA methylation and histone methylation (H3K4me3 and H3K27me3), particularly at CGIs associated with developmental genes.
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