Abstract

Complementary sets of genes are epigenetically silenced in male and female gametes in a process termed genomic imprinting. The Dnmt3L gene is expressed during gametogenesis at stages where genomic imprints are established. Targeted disruption of Dnmt3L caused azoospermia in homozygous males, and heterozygous progeny of homozygous females died before midgestation. Bisulfite genomic sequencing of DNA from oocytes and embryos showed that removal of Dnmt3L prevented methylation of sequences that are normally maternally methylated. The defect was specific to imprinted regions, and global genome methylation levels were not affected. Lack of maternal methylation imprints in heterozygous embryos derived from homozygous mutant oocytes caused biallelic expression of genes that are normally expressed only from the allele of paternal origin. The key catalytic motifs characteristic of DNA cytosine methyltransferases have been lost from Dnmt3L, and the protein is more likely to act as a regulator of imprint establishment than as a DNA methyltransferase.

Keywords

Genomic imprintingBiologyGeneticsDNA methylationMethyltransferaseMethylationDNA methyltransferaseMutantGenegenomic DNAAlleleBisulfiteEmbryoGene expression

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Publication Info

Year
2001
Type
article
Volume
294
Issue
5551
Pages
2536-2539
Citations
1386
Access
Closed

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Déborah Bourc’his, Guoliang Xu, Chyuan‐Sheng Lin et al. (2001). Dnmt3L and the Establishment of Maternal Genomic Imprints. Science , 294 (5551) , 2536-2539. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1065848

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DOI
10.1126/science.1065848