High-Resolution Enzymatic Mapping of Genomic 5-Hydroxymethylcytosine in Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells

Zhiyi Sun(New England Biolabs (United States)), Jolyon Terragni(New England Biolabs (United States)), Janine G. Borgaro(New England Biolabs (United States)), Yiwei Liu(Emory University), Ling Yu(New England Biolabs (China)), Shengxi Guan(New England Biolabs (United States)), Hua Wang(New England Biolabs (United States)), Dapeng Sun(New England Biolabs (China)), Xiaodong Cheng(Emory University), Zhenyu Zhu(New England Biolabs (United States)), Sriharsa Pradhan(New England Biolabs (United States)), Yu Zheng(New England Biolabs (United States))
Cell Reports
January 24, 2013
Cited by 175Open Access
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Abstract

We describe the use of a unique DNA-modification-dependent restriction endonuclease AbaSI coupled with sequencing (Aba-seq) to map high-resolution hydroxymethylome of mouse E14 embryonic stem cells. The specificity of AbaSI enables sensitive detection of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) at low-occupancy regions. Bioinformatic analysis suggests 5hmCs in genic regions closely follow the 5mC distribution. 5hmC is generally depleted in CpG islands and only enriched in a small set of repetitive elements. A regularly spaced and oscillating 5hmC pattern was observed at the binding sites of CTCF. 5hmC is enriched at the poised enhancers with the monomethylated histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4me1) marks, but not at the active enhancers with the acetylated histone H3 lysine 27 (H3K27Ac) marks. Non-CG hydroxymethylation appears to be prevalent in the mitochondrial genome. We propose that some amounts of transiently stable 5hmCs may indicate a poised epigenetic state or demethylation intermediate, whereas others may suggest a locally accessible chromosomal environment for the TET enzymatic apparatus.


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