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DNA methylation and differential gene regulation in photoreceptor cell death.

Farinelli, Pietro LU ; Perera, A ; Arango-Gonzalez, B ; Trifunovic, D ; Wagner, M ; Carell, T ; Biel, M ; Zrenner, E ; Michalakis, S and Paquet-Durand, Francois LU , et al. (2014) In Cell Death & Disease 5.
Abstract
Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) defines a group of inherited degenerative retinal diseases causing progressive loss of photoreceptors. To this day, RP is still untreatable and rational treatment development will require a thorough understanding of the underlying cell death mechanisms. Methylation of the DNA base cytosine by DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) is an important epigenetic factor regulating gene expression, cell differentiation, cell death, and survival. Previous studies suggested an involvement of epigenetic mechanisms in RP, and in this study, increased cytosine methylation was detected in dying photoreceptors in the rd1, rd2, P23H, and S334ter rodent models for RP. Ultrastructural analysis of photoreceptor nuclear morphology in the... (More)
Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) defines a group of inherited degenerative retinal diseases causing progressive loss of photoreceptors. To this day, RP is still untreatable and rational treatment development will require a thorough understanding of the underlying cell death mechanisms. Methylation of the DNA base cytosine by DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) is an important epigenetic factor regulating gene expression, cell differentiation, cell death, and survival. Previous studies suggested an involvement of epigenetic mechanisms in RP, and in this study, increased cytosine methylation was detected in dying photoreceptors in the rd1, rd2, P23H, and S334ter rodent models for RP. Ultrastructural analysis of photoreceptor nuclear morphology in the rd1 mouse model for RP revealed a severely altered chromatin structure during retinal degeneration that coincided with an increased expression of the DNMT isozyme DNMT3a. To identify disease-specific differentially methylated DNA regions (DMRs) on a genomic level, we immunoprecipitated methylated DNA fragments and subsequently analyzed them with a targeted microarray. Genome-wide comparison of DMRs between rd1 and wild-type retina revealed hypermethylation of genes involved in cell death and survival as well as cell morphology and nervous system development. When correlating DMRs with gene expression data, we found that hypermethylation occurred alongside transcriptional repression. Consistently, motif analysis showed that binding sites of several important transcription factors for retinal physiology were hypermethylated in the mutant model, which also correlated with transcriptional silencing of their respective target genes. Finally, inhibition of DNMTs in rd1 organotypic retinal explants using decitabine resulted in a substantial reduction of photoreceptor cell death, suggesting inhibition of DNA methylation as a potential novel treatment in RP. (Less)
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Cell Death & Disease
volume
5
article number
e1558
publisher
Nature Publishing Group
external identifiers
  • pmid:25476906
  • wos:000347837400012
  • scopus:84927914910
ISSN
2041-4889
DOI
10.1038/cddis.2014.512
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
af0b4fbd-bd1e-4f33-88e2-59cae49caafc (old id 4912686)
alternative location
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25476906?dopt=Abstract
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 14:49:53
date last changed
2022-03-22 02:08:22
@article{af0b4fbd-bd1e-4f33-88e2-59cae49caafc,
  abstract     = {{Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) defines a group of inherited degenerative retinal diseases causing progressive loss of photoreceptors. To this day, RP is still untreatable and rational treatment development will require a thorough understanding of the underlying cell death mechanisms. Methylation of the DNA base cytosine by DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) is an important epigenetic factor regulating gene expression, cell differentiation, cell death, and survival. Previous studies suggested an involvement of epigenetic mechanisms in RP, and in this study, increased cytosine methylation was detected in dying photoreceptors in the rd1, rd2, P23H, and S334ter rodent models for RP. Ultrastructural analysis of photoreceptor nuclear morphology in the rd1 mouse model for RP revealed a severely altered chromatin structure during retinal degeneration that coincided with an increased expression of the DNMT isozyme DNMT3a. To identify disease-specific differentially methylated DNA regions (DMRs) on a genomic level, we immunoprecipitated methylated DNA fragments and subsequently analyzed them with a targeted microarray. Genome-wide comparison of DMRs between rd1 and wild-type retina revealed hypermethylation of genes involved in cell death and survival as well as cell morphology and nervous system development. When correlating DMRs with gene expression data, we found that hypermethylation occurred alongside transcriptional repression. Consistently, motif analysis showed that binding sites of several important transcription factors for retinal physiology were hypermethylated in the mutant model, which also correlated with transcriptional silencing of their respective target genes. Finally, inhibition of DNMTs in rd1 organotypic retinal explants using decitabine resulted in a substantial reduction of photoreceptor cell death, suggesting inhibition of DNA methylation as a potential novel treatment in RP.}},
  author       = {{Farinelli, Pietro and Perera, A and Arango-Gonzalez, B and Trifunovic, D and Wagner, M and Carell, T and Biel, M and Zrenner, E and Michalakis, S and Paquet-Durand, Francois and Ekström, Per}},
  issn         = {{2041-4889}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Nature Publishing Group}},
  series       = {{Cell Death & Disease}},
  title        = {{DNA methylation and differential gene regulation in photoreceptor cell death.}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/4190131/7752951}},
  doi          = {{10.1038/cddis.2014.512}},
  volume       = {{5}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}