4.8 Article

Epigenetic silencing of engineered L1 retrotransposition events in human embryonic carcinoma cells

Journal

NATURE
Volume 466, Issue 7307, Pages 769-773

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature09209

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [GM060518, GM082970, NS-048187, GM-069985, AI051198]
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  3. Instituto de Salud Carlos III - Consejeria de Salud Junta de Andalucia (ISCIII-CSJA) [EMER07/056]
  4. Marie Curie International Reintegration Grant action [FP7-PEOPLE-2007-4-3-IRG]
  5. Junta de Andalucia (Spain) [P09-CTS-4980, PI0002/2009, P08-CTS-3678]
  6. Spanish Ministry of Health [FIS PI08171, CP07/00065, FIS PI070026]
  7. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation MICINN-PLANE [PLE-2009-0111]
  8. Burroughs Wellcome Foundation
  9. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases NIH [R01 (DK62027)]
  10. Cellular and Molecular Approaches to Systems and Integrative Biology Training Grant [T32-GM08322]
  11. Cancer Research Institute
  12. University of Michigan
  13. University of Michigan's Cancer Center [NIH 5 P30 CA46592]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Long interspersed element-1 (LINE-1 or L1) retrotransposition continues to affect human genome evolution(1,2). L1s can retrotranspose in the germline, during early development and in select somatic cells(3-8); however, the host response to L1 retrotransposition remains largely unexplored. Here we show that reporter genes introduced into the genome of various human embryonic carcinoma-derived cell lines (ECs) by L1 retrotransposition are rapidly and efficiently silenced either during or immediately after their integration. Treating ECs with histone deacetylase inhibitors rapidly reverses this silencing, and chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that reactivation of the reporter gene was correlated with changes in chromatin status at the L1 integration site. Under our assay conditions, rapid silencing was also observed when reporter genes were delivered into ECs by mouse L1s and a zebrafish LINE-2 element, but not when similar reporter genes were delivered into ECs by Moloney murine leukaemia virus or human immunodeficiency virus, suggesting that these integration events are silenced by distinct mechanisms. Finally, we demonstrate that subjecting ECs to culture conditions that promote differentiation attenuates the silencing of reporter genes delivered by L1 retrotransposition, but that differentiation, in itself, is not sufficient to reactivate previously silenced reporter genes. Thus, our data indicate that ECs differ from many differentiated cells in their ability to silence reporter genes delivered by L1 retrotransposition.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available