scholarly journals SIZ1-mediated SUMOylation of ROS1 Enhances Its Stability and Positively Regulates Active DNA Demethylation in Arabidopsis

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiangfeng Kong ◽  
Yechun Hong ◽  
Yi-Feng Hsu ◽  
Huan Huang ◽  
Xue Liu ◽  
...  

AbstractThe 5-methylcytosine DNA glycosylase/lyase REPRESSOR OF SILENCING 1 (ROS1)-mediated active DNA demethylation is critical for shaping the genomic DNA methylation landscape in Arabidopsis. Whether and how the stability of ROS1 may be regulated by post-translational modifications is unknown. Using a methylation-sensitive PCR (CHOP-PCR)-based forward genetic screen for Arabidopsis DNA hypermethylation mutants, we identified the SUMO E3 ligase SIZ1 as a critical regulator of active DNA demethylation. Dysfunction of SIZ1 leads to hyper-methylation at approximately one thousand genomic regions. SIZ1 physically interacts with ROS1 and mediates the SUMOylation of ROS1. The SUMOylation of ROS1 is reduced in siz1 mutant plants. Compared to that in wild type plants, the protein level of ROS1 is significantly decreased, even though there is an increased level of ROS1 transcripts in siz1 mutant plants. Our results suggest that SIZ1 positively regulates active DNA demethylation by promoting the stability of ROS1 protein through SUMOylation.Short SummaryThe 5-methylcytosine DNA glycosylase/lyase REPRESSOR OF SILENCING 1 (ROS1) is indispensable for proper DNA methylation landscape in Arabidopsis. Whether and how the stability of ROS1 may be regulated by post-translational modifications is unknown. Here, we show that SIZ1-mediated SUMOylation of ROS1 enhances its stability and positively regulates active DNA demethylation.

Author(s):  
Pan Liu ◽  
Wen-Feng Nie ◽  
Xiansong Xiong ◽  
Yuhua Wang ◽  
Yuwei Jiang ◽  
...  

SUMMARYActive DNA demethylation is critical for altering DNA methylation patterns and regulating gene expression. The 5-methylcytosine DNA glycosylase/lyase ROS1 initiates a base excision repair pathway for active DNA demethylation and is required for the prevention of DNA hypermethylation at thousands of genomic regions in Arabidopsis. How ROS1 is regulated and targeted to specific genomic regions is not well understood. Here, we report the discovery of an Arabidopsis protein complex that contains ROS1, regulates ROS1 gene expression, and likely targets the ROS1 protein to specific genomic regions. ROS1 physically interacts with a WD40 domain protein (RWD40), which in turn interacts with a methyl-DNA binding protein (RMB1) as well as with a zinc finger and homeobox domain protein (RHD1). RMB1 binds to DNA that is methylated in any sequence context, and this binding is necessary for its function in vivo.Loss-of-function mutations in RWD40, RMB1, or RHD1 cause DNA hypermethylation at several tested genomic regions independently of the known ROS1 regulator IDM1. Because the hypermethylated genomic regions include the DNA methylation monitoring sequence in the ROS1 promoter, plants mutated in RWD40, RMB1, or RHD1 show increased ROS1 expression. Importantly, ROS1 binding to the ROS1 promoter requires RWD40, RMB1, and RHD1, suggesting that this complex dictates ROS1 targeting to this locus. Our results demonstrate that ROS1 forms a protein complex with RWD40, RMB1, and RHD1, and that this novel complex regulates active DNA demethylation at several endogenous loci in Arabidopsis.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (4) ◽  
pp. 1430-1436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huan Huang ◽  
Ruie Liu ◽  
Qingfeng Niu ◽  
Kai Tang ◽  
Bo Zhang ◽  
...  

DNA methylation is an important epigenetic mark involved in many biological processes. The genome of the climacteric tomato fruit undergoes a global loss of DNA methylation due to active DNA demethylation during the ripening process. It is unclear whether the ripening of other fruits is also associated with global DNA demethylation. We characterized the single-base resolution DNA methylomes of sweet orange fruits. Compared with immature orange fruits, ripe orange fruits gained DNA methylation at over 30,000 genomic regions and lost DNA methylation at about 1,000 genomic regions, suggesting a global increase in DNA methylation during orange fruit ripening. This increase in DNA methylation was correlated with decreased expression of DNA demethylase genes. The application of a DNA methylation inhibitor interfered with ripening, indicating that the DNA hypermethylation is critical for the proper ripening of orange fruits. We found that ripening-associated DNA hypermethylation was associated with the repression of several hundred genes, such as photosynthesis genes, and with the activation of hundreds of genes, including genes involved in abscisic acid responses. Our results suggest important roles of DNA methylation in orange fruit ripening.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (19) ◽  
pp. 9652-9657 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Yvonne Kim ◽  
Akemi Ono ◽  
Stefan Scholten ◽  
Tetsu Kinoshita ◽  
Daniel Zilberman ◽  
...  

Epigenetic reprogramming is required for proper regulation of gene expression in eukaryotic organisms. In Arabidopsis, active DNA demethylation is crucial for seed viability, pollen function, and successful reproduction. The DEMETER (DME) DNA glycosylase initiates localized DNA demethylation in vegetative and central cells, so-called companion cells that are adjacent to sperm and egg gametes, respectively. In rice, the central cell genome displays local DNA hypomethylation, suggesting that active DNA demethylation also occurs in rice; however, the enzyme responsible for this process is unknown. One candidate is the rice REPRESSOR OF SILENCING1a (ROS1a) gene, which is related to DME and is essential for rice seed viability and pollen function. Here, we report genome-wide analyses of DNA methylation in wild-type and ros1a mutant sperm and vegetative cells. We find that the rice vegetative cell genome is locally hypomethylated compared with sperm by a process that requires ROS1a activity. We show that many ROS1a target sequences in the vegetative cell are hypomethylated in the rice central cell, suggesting that ROS1a also demethylates the central cell genome. Similar to Arabidopsis, we show that sperm non-CG methylation is indirectly promoted by DNA demethylation in the vegetative cell. These results reveal that DNA glycosylase-mediated DNA demethylation processes are conserved in Arabidopsis and rice, plant species that diverged 150 million years ago. Finally, although global non-CG methylation levels of sperm and egg differ, the maternal and paternal embryo genomes show similar non-CG methylation levels, suggesting that rice gamete genomes undergo dynamic DNA methylation reprogramming after cell fusion.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (33) ◽  
pp. 16641-16650 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen-Feng Nie ◽  
Mingguang Lei ◽  
Mingxuan Zhang ◽  
Kai Tang ◽  
Huan Huang ◽  
...  

Active DNA demethylation is critical for controlling the DNA methylomes in plants and mammals. However, little is known about how DNA demethylases are recruited to target loci, and the involvement of chromatin marks in this process. Here, we identify 2 components of the SWR1 chromatin-remodeling complex, PIE1 and ARP6, as required for ROS1-mediated DNA demethylation, and discover 2 SWR1-associated bromodomain-containing proteins, AtMBD9 and nuclear protein X1 (NPX1). AtMBD9 and NPX1 recognize histone acetylation marks established by increased DNA methylation 1 (IDM1), a known regulator of DNA demethylation, redundantly facilitating H2A.Z deposition at IDM1 target loci. We show that at some genomic regions, H2A.Z and DNA methylation marks coexist, and H2A.Z physically interacts with ROS1 to regulate DNA demethylation and antisilencing. Our results unveil a mechanism through which DNA demethylases can be recruited to specific target loci exhibiting particular histone marks, providing a conceptual framework to understand how chromatin marks regulate DNA demethylation.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 1076-1076
Author(s):  
Mathijs A. Sanders ◽  
Annelieke Zeilemaker ◽  
Adil al Hinai ◽  
Remco Hoogenboezem ◽  
François G. Kavelaars ◽  
...  

Abstract Clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) is a clonal disorder characterized by preleukemic mutations and increases in prevalence during aging. Infrequently CHIP progresses to hematological cancer implying that preleukemic mutations subtly affect leukemogenesis but a mechanistic explanation is lacking. Exceedingly, preleukemic mutations are acquired in genes encoding for DNA methylation modifiers, predominantly in DNMT3A and members of the active DNA demethylation pathway. DNMT3A encodes a de novo methyltransferase establishing 5-methylcytosine (5mC) and mutations in this gene are linked to impaired DNA methylation and DNA damage sensing. Active DNA demethylation is carried out by two independent pathways (Figure 1A). The oxidation active repair (AOAR) pathway converts 5mC to DNA demethylation derivates which are cleaved by the DNA glycosylase TDG. The deamination pathway deaminates 5mC introducing a T/G mismatch which is cleaved by the DNA glycosylases MBD4 and TDG. Importantly, ineffective T/G mismatch repair results in C>T mutations at CpGs. Strikingly, recent studies revealed that the genomes of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients have a preponderance for C>T mutations at CpGs, potentially linking this mutational process to the deamination pathway. Here we present data revealing a specific mechanism by which DNMT3A gene mutations may enhance leukemogenesis through the deregulation of the active DNA demethylation pathway. A detailed understanding on the effects of DNA methylation modifier mutations was obtained from a single AML patient for whom we carried out whole exome sequencing on diagnostic and relapse specimens. At diagnosis the patient presented with 331 somatic mutations from which 324 where C>T mutations (97.8%) and at relapse his leukemia had acquired 386 somatic mutations from which 384 where C>T mutations (99.5%), which almost all (>95%) were in CpGs. We superimposed the somatic mutations on the DNA demethylation pathways to understand the pervasiveness of this mutational process in this AML patient. We detected a R132C IDH1 mutation at diagnosis and relapse effectively impairing the AOAR pathway. Thus, only ineffective T/G mismatch repair by the deamination pathway could confer this mutational pattern. Strikingly, we observed a homozygous MBD4 mutation rendering the protein catalytically inactive. However, we could not detect genetic lesions perturbing TDG. Recent studies demonstrated that DNMT3A potentiates TDG activity through interaction. Consistent with this finding the patient presented at diagnosis the hotspot R882C DNMT3A mutation while at relapse his leukemia presented with the R635W, R668C, R882C and A884V DNMT3A mutations. We investigated whether mutant DNMT3A systematically attenuates TDG activity through glycosylase activity assays with recombinant proteins. We demonstrated that incrementing wildtype DNMT3A concentration increase the TDG activity towards T/G-mismatches. In contrast, we found that recombinant DNMT3A with mutations at R668C, R882C and A884V rapidly decrease TDG activity with increasing concentrations, while DNMT3A R635W affected TDG activity to a lesser extent. Importantly, wildtype DNMT3A only overcomes the negative effects of mutant DNMT3A on TDG activity at high concentration implying a dominant negative effect of mutant DNMT3A. We subsequently analyzed a larger cohort of AML cases. Targeted sequencing of 750 AML cases and public data from the Cancer Genome Atlas revealed a specific AML subgroup characterized by biallelic DNMT3A mutations, with concurrent TET2, IDH1 or IDH2 mutations, but lacking NPM1 mutations. Our data suggest that impairment of the AOAR pathway combined with the loss of wildtype DNMT3A attenuates TDG activity and greater CpG mutability (Figure 1B). Notably, multivariate analysis revealed that biallelic DNMT3A mutations serve as an independent marker for poor prognosis (p=3.89x10-5). In summary, these studies provide strong evidence for a novel mechanism by which mutant DNMT3A enhances CpG mutagenesis through attenuation of the DNA glycosylase TDG, frequently in combination with AOAR pathway impairment, a mutational pattern frequently observed in AML. Therefore preleukemic mutations in CHIP, like those frequently observed in DNMT3A, could play a pivotal role by increasing the likelihood of acquiring crucial secondary genetic events by attenuating DNA repair at CpGs. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Artem V. Artemov ◽  
Svetlana Zhenilo ◽  
Daria Kaplun ◽  
Alexey Starshin ◽  
Alexey Sokolov ◽  
...  

Hypermethylation of tumor suppressors and other aberrations of DNA methylation in tumors play a significant role in cancer progression. DNA methylation can be affected by various environmental conditions including hypoxia. The response to hypoxia is mainly achieved through activation of the transcription program associated with HIF1a transcription factor. VHL inactivation by genetic or epigenetic events, which also induces aberrant activation of HIF1a, is the most common driver event for renal cancer. With whole-genome bisulfite sequencing and LC-MS, we demonstrated that VHL inactivation induced global genome hypermethylation in human kidney cancer cells under normoxic conditions. This effect was reverted by exogenous expression of wild-type VHL. We show that global genome hypermethylation in VHL mutants can be explained by transcriptional changes in MDH and L2HGDH genes that cause the accumulation of 2-hydroxyglutarate—a metabolite that inhibits DNA demethylation by Tet enzymes. Unlike the known cases of DNA hypermethylation in cancer, 2-hydroxyglutarate was accumulated in IDH wild type cells.Key pointsInactivation of VHL gene leads to genome hypermethylation in kidney cancer cells. The DNA methylation phenotype can be rescued by endogenous expression of wild-type VHL.DNA hypermethylation can be attributed to the accumulation of a Tet inhibitor 2-hydroxyglutarateThe accumulation of 2-hydroxyglutarate in IDH wild-type cells is explained by gene expression changes in key metabolic enzymes (malate dehydrogenase MDH and 2-hydroxyglutrarate dehydrogenase L2HGDH).


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (26) ◽  
pp. eaaz2963
Author(s):  
Wei Lin ◽  
Linhua Sun ◽  
Run-Zhou Huang ◽  
Wenjie Liang ◽  
Xinyu Liu ◽  
...  

DNA demethylation is important for the erasure of DNA methylation. The role of DNA demethylation in plant development remains poorly understood. Here, we found extensive DNA demethylation in the CHH context around pericentromeric regions and DNA demethylation in the CG, CHG, and CHH contexts at discrete genomic regions during ectopic xylem tracheary element (TE) differentiation. While loss of pericentromeric methylation occurs passively, DNA demethylation at a subset of regions relies on active DNA demethylation initiated by DNA glycosylases ROS1, DML2, and DML3. The ros1 and rdd mutations impair ectopic TE differentiation and xylem development in the young roots of Arabidopsis seedlings. Active DNA demethylation targets and regulates many genes for TE differentiation. The defect of xylem development in rdd is proposed to be caused by dysregulation of multiple genes. Our study identifies a role of active DNA demethylation in vascular development and reveals an epigenetic mechanism for TE differentiation.


2015 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 3553-3557 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mingguang Lei ◽  
Huiming Zhang ◽  
Russell Julian ◽  
Kai Tang ◽  
Shaojun Xie ◽  
...  

De novo DNA methylation through the RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) pathway and active DNA demethylation play important roles in controlling genome-wide DNA methylation patterns in plants. Little is known about how cells manage the balance between DNA methylation and active demethylation activities. Here, we report the identification of a unique RdDM target sequence, where DNA methylation is required for maintaining proper active DNA demethylation of the Arabidopsis genome. In a genetic screen for cellular antisilencing factors, we isolated several REPRESSOR OF SILENCING 1 (ros1) mutant alleles, as well as many RdDM mutants, which showed drastically reduced ROS1 gene expression and, consequently, transcriptional silencing of two reporter genes. A helitron transposon element (TE) in the ROS1 gene promoter negatively controls ROS1 expression, whereas DNA methylation of an RdDM target sequence between ROS1 5′ UTR and the promoter TE region antagonizes this helitron TE in regulating ROS1 expression. This RdDM target sequence is also targeted by ROS1, and defective DNA demethylation in loss-of-function ros1 mutant alleles causes DNA hypermethylation of this sequence and concomitantly causes increased ROS1 expression. Our results suggest that this sequence in the ROS1 promoter region serves as a DNA methylation monitoring sequence (MEMS) that senses DNA methylation and active DNA demethylation activities. Therefore, the ROS1 promoter functions like a thermostat (i.e., methylstat) to sense DNA methylation levels and regulates DNA methylation by controlling ROS1 expression.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stéfanie Graindorge ◽  
Valérie Cognat ◽  
Philippe Johann to Berens ◽  
Jérôme Mutterer ◽  
Jean Molinier

AbstractPlants are exposed to the damaging effect of sunlight that induces DNA photolesions. In order to maintain genome integrity, specific DNA repair pathways are mobilized. Upon removal of UV-induced DNA lesions, the accurate re-establishment of epigenome landscape is expected to be a prominent step of these DNA repair pathways. However, it remains poorly documented whether DNA methylation is accurately maintained at photodamaged sites and how photodamage repair pathways contribute to the maintenance of genome/methylome integrities. Using genome wide approaches, we report that UV-C irradiation leads to asymmetric DNA methylation changes. We identified that the specific DNA repair pathways involved in the repair of UV-induced DNA lesions, Direct Repair (DR) and Global Genome Repair (GGR), prevent the excessive alterations of DNA methylation landscape. Moreover, we identified that UV-C irradiation induced chromocenter reorganization and that photodamage repair factors control this dynamics. The methylome changes rely on misregulation of maintenance, de novo and active DNA demethylation pathways highlighting that molecular processes related to genome and methylome integrities are closely interconnected. Importantly, we identified that photolesions are sources of DNA methylation changes in both, constitutive and facultative heterochromatin. This study unveils that DNA repair factors, together with small RNA, act to accurately maintain both genome and methylome integrities at photodamaged silent genomic regions, strengthening the idea that plants have evolved sophisticated interplays between DNA methylation dynamics and DNA repair.


2017 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 323-338 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maïté Leturcq ◽  
Tony Lefebvre ◽  
Anne-Sophie Vercoutter-Edouart

Post-translational modifications of histones and the dynamic DNA methylation cycle are finely regulated by a myriad of chromatin-binding factors and chromatin-modifying enzymes. Epigenetic modifications ensure local changes in the architecture of chromatin, thus controlling in fine the accessibility of the machinery of transcription, replication or DNA repair to the chromatin. Over the past decade, the nutrient-sensor enzyme O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT) has emerged as a modulator of chromatin remodeling. In mammals, OGT acts either directly through dynamic and reversible O-GlcNAcylation of histones and chromatin effectors, or in an indirect manner through its recruitment into chromatin-bound multiprotein complexes. In particular, there is an increasing amount of evidence of a cross-talk between OGT and the DNA dioxygenase ten–eleven translocation proteins that catalyze active DNA demethylation. Conversely, the stability of OGT itself can be controlled by the histone lysine-specific demethylase 2 (LSD2). Finally, a few studies have explored the role of O-GlcNAcase (OGA) in chromatin remodeling. In this review, we summarize the recent findings on the link between OGT, OGA and chromatin regulators in mammalian cellular models, and discuss their relevance in physiological and pathological conditions.


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