In utero undernourishment perturbs the adult sperm methylome and intergenerational metabolism

Elizabeth J. Radford(University of Cambridge), Mitsuteru Ito(University of Cambridge), Hui Shi(University of Cambridge), Jennifer A. Corish(University of Cambridge), Kazuki Yamazawa(University of Cambridge), Elvira Isganaitis(Joslin Diabetes Center), Stefanie Seisenberger(Babraham Institute), Timothy A. Hore(Babraham Institute), Wolf Reik(Babraham Institute), Serap Erkek(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Antoine H.F.M. Peters(University of Basel), Mary‐Elizabeth Patti(Joslin Diabetes Center), Anne C. Ferguson‐Smith(University of Cambridge)
Science
July 11, 2014
Cited by 639Open Access
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Abstract

Adverse prenatal environments can promote metabolic disease in offspring and subsequent generations. Animal models and epidemiological data implicate epigenetic inheritance, but the mechanisms remain unknown. In an intergenerational developmental programming model affecting F2 mouse metabolism, we demonstrate that the in utero nutritional environment of F1 embryos alters the germline DNA methylome of F1 adult males in a locus-specific manner. Differentially methylated regions are hypomethylated and enriched in nucleosome-retaining regions. A substantial fraction is resistant to early embryo methylation reprogramming, which may have an impact on F2 development. Differential methylation is not maintained in F2 tissues, yet locus-specific expression is perturbed. Thus, in utero nutritional exposures during critical windows of germ cell development can impact the male germline methylome, associated with metabolic disease in offspring.


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