scholarly journals Hepatic DNA Methylation in Response to Early Stimulation of Microbiota with Lactobacillus Synbiotics in Broiler Chickens

Genes ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksandra Dunislawska ◽  
Anna Slawinska ◽  
Maria Siwek

DNA methylation inhibits DNA transcription by the addition of methyl residues to cysteine within the CpG islands of gene promoters. The process of DNA methylation can be modulated by environmental factors such as intestinal microbiota. In poultry, the composition of the intestinal microbiota can be stimulated by in ovo delivery of synbiotics. The present study aims to determine the effect of Lactobacillus synbiotics delivered in ovo on the level of hepatic DNA methylation in broiler chickens. In ovo stimulation was performed on day 12 of egg incubation. Bioactive compounds delivered in ovo included (S1)—Lactobacillus salivarius with GOS and (S2)—Lactobacillus plantarum with RFO. Samples were collected from six individuals from each group on day 42 post-hatching. DNA methylation of five genes selected on the basis of the transcriptome data were analyzed using the qMSP method. Significant changes were observed in DNA methylation of genes in liver including ANGPTL4 and NR4A3, after S2 delivery. The obtained results confirm that the downregulation of metabolic gene expression in the liver mediated by in ovo stimulation had epigenetic characteristics.

2021 ◽  
Vol 99 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. 85-86
Author(s):  
Aleksandra Dunislawska

Abstract Epigenetic regulation of the gene expression is an interaction of the external environment with the genetic information. They are potentially heritable changes in the gene expression which does not involve alteration in DNA sequence and can be triggered by microRNA activity and DNA methylation. MicroRNA is fraction of small RNA molecules that have a fundamental impact on gene expression. DNA methylation inhibits DNA transcription by addition of the methyl residues to the cysteine within the CpG islands of the gene promoters. These processes can be modulated by environmental factors, such as intestinal microbiota modification. In poultry, the microbiota can be reprogrammed using in ovo technology at an early stage of embryo development. The intestinal microbiota is therefore stimulated and rearranged by injecting bioactive substances into air chamber of eggs on the day 12 of incubation. We have proved that the administration of lactic acid bacteria strains and galactooligosaccharide in ovo is effective in modulating of the intestinal microbiota. The administration of bioactive compounds has been demonstrated to influence gene expression in immune, intestinal and metabolic tissues. However, it has been noticed that a significant part of genes is silenced. In our experiment after in ovo administration of the substances in different genotypes (chicken broiler and native Polish breed) the range of tissues was collected: liver, caecal tonsils, spleen. By performing the bioinformatic analysis of the expression microarray, silenced genes and active miRNAs were selected. Methylation was analysed using the global and MSP-qPCR method, and analysis of miRNA activity using miRCURY LNA PCR Systems. We confirmed that negative regulation of the gene expression have epigenetic character and its mechanism depends on the genotype and the substance administered in ovo. Epigenetic nature of research is new direction of host-microbiome interaction. Research was financed by grant UMO-2017/25/N/NZ9/01822 funded by National Science Centre (Poland).


Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 476
Author(s):  
Marianna Szczypka ◽  
Agnieszka Suszko-Pawłowska ◽  
Maciej Kuczkowski ◽  
Michał Gorczykowski ◽  
Magdalena Lis ◽  
...  

The effects of in ovo-delivered prebiotics and synbiotics on the lymphocyte subsets of the lymphoid organs in non-immunized 7-day-old broiler chickens and in non-immunized, sheep red blood cells (SRBC)-immunized, and dextran (DEX)-immunized 21- and 35-day-old birds were studied. The substances were injected on the 12th day of egg incubation: Prebiotic1 group (Pre1) with a solution of inulin, Prebiotic2 group (Pre2) with a solution of Bi2tos (non-digestive transgalacto-oligosaccharides), Synbiotic1 group (Syn1) with inulin and Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis IBB SL1, and Synbiotic2 group (Syn2) with Bi2tos and Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris IBB SC1. In 7-day-old chicks, a decrease in T splenocytes was noticed in all groups. The most pronounced effect in 21- and 35-day-old birds was an increase in TCRγδ+ cells in Syn1 and Syn2 groups. A decrease in bursal B cells was observed in DEX-immunized Pre1 group (21-day-old birds), and in the Syn1 group in non-immunized and SRBC-immunized 35-day-old birds. An increase in double-positive lymphocytes was observed in Pre1 (35-day-old birds) and Pre2 (immunized 21-day-old birds) groups. In Pre1 and Syn1 groups (21- and 35-day-old), an increase in B splenocytes and a decrease in T splenocytes were observed. We concluded that Syn1 was the most effective in the stimulation of the chicken immune system.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksandra Dunislawska ◽  
Agnieszka Herosimczyk ◽  
Adam Lepczynski ◽  
Petr Slama ◽  
Anna Slawinska ◽  
...  

Intestinal microbiota are a key factor in maintaining good health and production results in chickens. They play an important role in the stimulation of immune responses, as well as in metabolic processes and nutrient digestion. Bioactive substances such as prebiotics, probiotics, or a combination of the two (synbiotic) can effectively stimulate intestinal microbiota and therefore replace antibiotic growth promoters. Intestinal microbiota might be stimulated at the early stage of embryo development in ovo. The aim of the study was to analyze the expression of genes related to energy metabolism and immune response after the administration of inulin and a synbiotic, in which lactic acid bacteria were combined with inulin in the intestines and immune tissues of chicken broilers. The experiment was performed on male broiler chickens. Eggs were incubated for 21 days in a commercial hatchery. On day 12 of egg incubation, inulin as a prebiotic and inulin with Lactobacillus lactis subsp. cremoris as a synbiotic were delivered to the egg chamber. The control group was injected with physiological saline. On day 35 post-hatching, birds from each group were randomly selected and sacrificed. Tissues (spleen, cecal tonsils, and large intestine) were collected and intended for RNA isolation. The gene panel (ABCG8, HNF4A, ACOX2, APBB1IP, BRSK2, APOA1, and IRS2) was selected based on the microarray dataset and biological functions of genes related to the energy metabolism and immune responses. Isolated RNA was analyzed using the RT-qPCR method, and the relative gene expression was calculated. In our experiment, distinct effects of prebiotics and synbiotics following in ovo delivery were manifested in all analyzed tissues, with the lowest number of genes with altered expression shown in the large intestines of broilers. The results demonstrated that prebiotics or synbiotics provide a potent stimulation of gene expression in the spleen and cecal tonsils of broiler chickens. The overall number of gene expression levels and the magnitude of their changes in the spleen and cecal tonsils were higher in the group of synbiotic chickens compared to the prebiotic group.


2020 ◽  
Vol 124 (9) ◽  
pp. 903-911 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yufei Zhu ◽  
Shizhao Li ◽  
Yulan Duan ◽  
Zhouzheng Ren ◽  
Xin Yang ◽  
...  

AbstractThis study aimed to evaluate the effect of in ovo feeding (IOF) of vitamin C at embryonic age 11 (E11) on post-hatch performance, immune status and DNA methylation-related gene expression in broiler chickens. A total of 240 Arbor Acres breeder eggs (63 (sem 0·5) g) were randomly divided into two groups: normal saline and vitamin C (VC) groups. After incubation, newly hatched chicks from each group were randomly divided into six replicates with ten chicks per replicate. Hatchability, average daily feed intake (D21–42 and D1–42), and average daily gain and feed conversion ratio (D1–21) were improved by vitamin C treatment (P < 0·05). IOF of vitamin C increased vitamin C content (D1), total antioxidant capacity (D42), IgA (D1), IgM (D1 and D21), stimulation index for T lymphocyte (D35) and lysozyme activity (D21) in plasma (P < 0·05). On D21, vitamin C increased the splenic expression of IL-4 and DNMT1 and decreased IL-1β, Tet2, Tet3 and Gadd45β expression (P < 0·05). On D42, vitamin C increased the splenic expression of IL-4 and DNMT3A and decreased IFN-γ, Tet3, MBD4 and TDG expression (P < 0·05). In conclusion, the vitamin C via in ovo injection can be absorbed by broiler’s embryo and IOF of vitamin C at E11 improves the post-hatch performance and immune status and, to some extent, the antioxidant capacity of broiler chickens. The expression of enzyme-related DNA methylation and demethylation indicates that the level of DNA methylation may increase in spleen in the VC group and whether the fluctuating expression of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines is related to DNA methylation change remained to be further investigated.


Animals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 687 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksandra Dunislawska ◽  
Maria Siwek ◽  
Anna Slawinska ◽  
Adam Lepczynski ◽  
Agnieszka Herosimczyk ◽  
...  

To better understand the effects of synbiotics administered at early stages of embryonic development in poultry, it is necessary to analyze direct effects (meat quality) and the molecular background. The molecular interpretation of poultry meat properties after in ovo administration of synbiotics remains to be reported. The purpose of the present study was to analyze the molecular background of meat quality based on gene expression and basic physiological parameters. Eggs were injected with (S1) Lactobacillus salivarius with galacto-oligosaccharides or (S2) Lactobacillus plantarum with raffinose family oligosaccharides. The pectoral muscle was collected at two time points (day 7 and day 42) and subjected to RNA isolation. Gene expression analysis was performed by RT-qPCR for a panel of eight genes associated with metabolism. The concentration of glucose and hormones (insulin, glucagon, and leptin (S1 p = 0.04)) was also increased. The obtained results showed that metabolic gene expression in the muscle was more differential due to synbiotic stimulation on day 7 (FST in S1 p = 0.03; PDK4 in S1 p = 0.02 and S2 p = 0.01; CEBPB in S1 p = 0.01 and S2 p = 0.008; PHKB in S1 p = 0.01; PRKAG3 in S1 p = 0.02) than on day 42 (PDK4 in S1 p = 0.04). On the basis of the results obtained, it can be concluded that in ovo stimulation with S1 triggered the most potent and favorable changes in the pectoral muscle gene expression in broiler chickens.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 1365-1365
Author(s):  
Jumpei Yamazaki ◽  
Rodolphe F Taby ◽  
Aparna Vasanthakumar ◽  
Trisha Macrae ◽  
Kelly R Ostler ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1365 TET2 enzymatically converts 5-methylcytosine to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine, possibly leading to loss of DNA methylation. TET2 mutations are common in myeloid leukemia and were proposed to contribute to leukemogenesis through DNA methylation. To expand on this concept, we studied chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) samples. TET2 missense or nonsense mutations were detected in 53% (16/30 patients). By contrast, only 1/30 patients had a mutation in IDH1 or IDH2, and none of them had a mutation in DNMT3A. By bisulfite pyrosequencing, global methylation measured by the LINE-1 assay and DNA methylation levels of 10 promoter CpG islands frequently abnormal in myeloid leukemia were not different between TET2 mutant and wild-type cases. This was also true for 9 out of 11 gene promoters reported by others as differentially methylated by TET2 mutations. We confirmed only two non-CpG island promoters, AIM2 and SP140, as hypermethylated in patients with mutant TET2. These were the only two gene promoters (out of 14 475 genes) previously found to be hypermethylated in TET2 mutant cases. This finding shows that hypermethylation of both AIM2 and SP140 are bona fide markers of TET2 mutant cases in CMML. On the other hand, total 5-methylcytosine levels in TET2 mutant cases were significantly higher than TET2 wild-type cases. Thus, TET2 mutations have a limited impact on promoter DNA methylation in CMML. To confirm this, we performed genome-wide analysis using a next-generation sequencing method for DNA methylation levels in three TET2 mutant cases. TET2 mutant CMMLs had an average of 230 (1.9%) promoter CpG island sites hypermethylated compared to normal blood, which is close to what is generally observed when one compares cancer to normal. By contrast, all three cases had near normal to increased levels of methylation outside CpG islands. The median methylation levels in non-promoter, non-CpG island sites was 88.7% in normal blood compared to 91.7%, 92.1% and 94.6% in the three TET2 mutant cases. Thus, TET2 mutant CMMLs escape the general hypomethylation phenomenon seen in many cancers. All together, our data suggest that TET2 mutant CMML cases may have distinct DNA methylation patterns primarily outside gene promoters. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 3736-3736
Author(s):  
Huimin Geng ◽  
Mignon L. Loh ◽  
Richard C. Harvey ◽  
I-Ming Chen ◽  
Meenakshi Devidas ◽  
...  

Abstract Although survival of children with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) has improved substantially over time, 15% to 20% of patients will relapse, and most of those who experience a bone marrow relapse will die. A better understanding of genetic and epigenetic aberrations in relapsed ALL will facilitate new strategies for risk stratification and targeted therapy. In this collaborative study with the Therapeutically Applicable Research to Generate Effective Treatments (TARGET) project, we performed high resolution genome-wide DNA methylation profiling using the HELP (HpaII tiny fragment Enrichment by Ligation-mediated PCR) array on a total of 178 (110 diagnosis, 68 relapse) leukemia samples from 111 patients with childhood B-ALL enrolled on the Children’s Oncology Group (COG) clinical trials who experienced relapsed, and 12 normal preB samples isolated from the bone marrows of 12 healthy individuals. The HELP array covers 117,521 CpG sites, annotated to ∼22,000 gene promoters. For eight diagnosis/relapse pairs, base-pair resolution DNA methylation using the eRRBS (enhanced Reduced Representation Bisulfite Sequencing) method was also performed on Illumina HiSeq2000. The median relapse time for the 111 patients was 21.8 months (range 2.1 to 56.2). Unsupervised clustering analysis using the HELP data revealed seven clusters: one cluster contained only the 12 normal preB samples; four clusters were enriched with MLLr, ETV6/RUNX1, Trisomy 4+10, and TCF3/PBX1 samples, respectively. The sixth cluster was not enriched for specific cytogenetic cases, but interestingly, all cases in this cluster were NCI High Risk (age>10 years or WBC>=50,000; p<0.0001, Fisher’s Exact test) while the seventh cluster has a mixture of other cases. Supervised analysis of HELP profiles between paired relapse/diagnosis samples (n=67) revealed a markedly aberrant DNA methylation signature (1011 probesets, 888 genes, FDR<0.01 and methylation difference dx >25%, paired t-test), with 70% of the genes hyper- and 30% hypo-methylated in relapse samples. Using a Bayesian predictor and leave-one-out cross validation, this methylation signature could predict a sample as diagnosis or relapse with 95.3% accuracy. When comparing early (<36 months; n=50) versus late relapses (>=36 months; n=18), we detected a profound hypermethylation signature in early relapse (96.6% of the 610 probesets, 544 genes, FDR<0.01, dx >25%). Finally, we identified 1800 probesets (1658 genes) as differentially methylated within all cytogenetic subtypes described above compared to the normal preB samples (Dunnett’s test with normal preB as reference, FDR<0.01, dx>25%). Again the majority (70%) of those genes were hypermethylated in relapse as compared to diagnostic and normal preB. The base-pair resolution and more comprehensive eRRBS methylation analysis for the eight pairs of samples identified 39,679 CpG sites as differentially methylated (dx >25%, FDR<0.01), with 78.2% CpG sites hyper- and 21.2% hypo-methylated in relapse samples. Remarkably, the hypermethylated CpGs are primarily in promoter regions (50%, defined as +/-1kb to TSS), followed by intergenic (26%), then intragenic (14%), and exonic (10%) regions. In contrast, the hypomethylated CpGs are mainly in intragenic (48%), followed by intergenic (31%), exonic (14%) and promoter (7%) regions. The hypermethylated CpGs were mainly in CpG islands (86%) or CpG shores (10%), while hypomethylated CpGs were not (CpG islands: 8%, CpG shores: 27%). We further identified 3040 differentially methylated regions (DMRs) with a median size 426 bp. 78.4% of those DMRs were hyper- (1362 gene promoters) and 21.6% hypo-methylated (98 promoters) in relapse compared to diagnostic samples. Gene set enrichment and Ingenuity pathway analysis showed epigenetically disrupted pathways that are highly involved in cell signaling, and embryonic and organismal development. Taken together, our genome-wide high resolution DNA methylation analysis on a large cohort of relapsed childhood B-ALL from the COG trial identified unique methylation signatures that correlated with relapse and with specific genetic subsets. Those methylation signatures featured prevailing promoter hypermethylation and to a lesser extent, intrageneic hypomethylation. Epigenetically dysregulated gene networks in those relapse samples involved cell signaling, and embryonic and organismal development. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Courtney W. Hanna ◽  
Jiahao Huang ◽  
Christian Belton ◽  
Susanne Reinhardt ◽  
Andreas Dahl ◽  
...  

SummaryHistone 3 lysine 4 trimethylation (H3K4me3) is an epigenetic mark found at gene promoters and CpG islands. H3K4me3 is essential for mammalian development, yet mechanisms underlying its genomic targeting are poorly understood. H3K4me3 methyltransferases SETD1B and MLL2 are essential for oogenesis. We investigated changes in H3K4me3 in Setd1b conditional knockout (cKO) GV oocytes using ultra-low input ChIP-seq, in conjunction with DNA methylation and gene expression analysis. Setd1b cKO oocytes showed a redistribution of H3K4me3, with a marked loss at active gene promoters associated with downregulated gene expression. Remarkably, many regions gained H3K4me3 in Setd1b cKOs, in particular those that were DNA hypomethylated, transcriptionally inactive and CpG-rich - hallmarks of MLL2 targets. Thus, loss of SETD1B appears to enable enhanced MLL2 activity. Our work reveals two distinct, complementary mechanisms of genomic targeting of H3K4me3 in oogenesis, with SETD1B linked to gene expression in the oogenic program and MLL2 to CpG content.


2013 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 803-807 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanne D. van Otterdijk ◽  
John C. Mathers ◽  
Gordon Strathdee

DNA methylation is an important epigenetic mechanism in mammalian cells. It occurs almost exclusively at CpG sites and has a key role in a number of biological processes. It plays an important part in regulating chromatin structure and has been best studied for its role in controlling gene expression. In particular, hypermethylation of gene promoters which have high levels of CpG sites, known as CpG islands, leads to gene inactivation. In healthy cells, however, it appears that only a small number of genes are controlled through promoter hypermethylation, such as genes on the inactivated X-chromosome or at imprinted loci, and most promoter-associated CpG islands remain methylation-free regardless of gene expression status. However, a large body of evidence has now shown that this protection from methylation not only breaks down in a number of pathological conditions (e.g. cancer), but also already occurs during the normal process of aging. The present review focuses on the methylation changes that occur during healthy aging and during disease development, and the potential links between them. We focus especially on the extent to which the acquisition of aberrant methylation changes during aging could underlie the development of a number of important age-related pathological conditions.


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