Mammalian Brain Development is Accompanied by a Dramatic Increase in Bipolar DNA Methylation

Ming An Sun, Zhixiong Sun, Xiaowei Wu, Veena Rajaram, David Keimig, Jessica Lim, Hongxiao Zhu, Hehuang Xie

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

DNA methylation is an epigenetic mechanism critical for tissue development and cell specification. Mammalian brains consist of many different types of cells with assumedly distinct DNA methylation profiles, and thus some genomic loci may demonstrate bipolar DNA methylation pattern, i.e. hypermethylated in one cell subset but hypomethylated in others. Currently, how extensive methylation patterns vary among brain cells is unknown and bipolar methylated genomic loci remain largely unexplored. In this study, we implemented a procedure to infer cell-subset specific methylated (CSM) loci from the methylomes of human and mouse frontal cortices at different developmental stages. With the genome-scale hairpin bisulfite sequencing approach, we demonstrated that the majority of CSM loci predicted likely resulted from the methylation differences among brain cells rather than from asymmetric DNA methylation between DNA double strands. Correlated with enhancer-associated histone modifications, putative CSM loci increased dramatically during early stages of brain development and were enriched for GWAS variants associated with neurological disorder-related diseases/traits. Altogether, this study provides a procedure to identify genomic regions showing methylation differences in a mixed cell population and our results suggest that a set of cis-regulatory elements are primed in early postnatal life whose functions may be compromised in human neurological disorders.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number32298
JournalScientific reports
Volume6
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2 2016

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

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