Conservation and divergence of methylation patterning in plants and animals

Suhua Feng(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Shawn Cokus(University of California, Los Angeles), Xiaoyu Zhang(University of Georgia), Pao‐Yang Chen(University of California, Los Angeles), Magnolia Bostick(Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology), Mary Goll(Carnegie Institution for Science), Jonathan Hetzel(Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology), Jayati Jain(Carnegie Institution for Science), Steven H. Strauss(Oregon State University), Marnie E. Halpern(Carnegie Institution for Science), Chinweike Ukomadu(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Kirsten C. Sadler(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Sriharsa Pradhan(New England Biolabs (United States)), Matteo Pellegrini(University of California, Los Angeles), Steven E. Jacobsen(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
April 15, 2010
Cited by 1,298

Abstract

Cytosine DNA methylation is a heritable epigenetic mark present in many eukaryotic organisms. Although DNA methylation likely has a conserved role in gene silencing, the levels and patterns of DNA methylation appear to vary drastically among different organisms. Here we used shotgun genomic bisulfite sequencing (BS-Seq) to compare DNA methylation in eight diverse plant and animal genomes. We found that patterns of methylation are very similar in flowering plants with methylated cytosines detected in all sequence contexts, whereas CG methylation predominates in animals. Vertebrates have methylation throughout the genome except for CpG islands. Gene body methylation is conserved with clear preference for exons in most organisms. Furthermore, genes appear to be the major target of methylation in Ciona and honey bee. Among the eight organisms, the green alga Chlamydomonas has the most unusual pattern of methylation, having non-CG methylation enriched in exons of genes rather than in repeats and transposons. In addition, the Dnmt1 cofactor Uhrf1 has a conserved function in maintaining CG methylation in both transposons and gene bodies in the mouse, Arabidopsis, and zebrafish genomes.


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