4.8 Article

Dnmt3a deficiency in the skin causes focal, canonical DNA hypomethylation and a cellular proliferation phenotype

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2022760118

Keywords

DNMT3A; DNA methylation; epigenetic; epidermis; premalignant

Funding

  1. Dermatology Foundation
  2. NIH [CA237727, CA211782, CA101937, CA197561]
  3. Barnes Jewish Foundation [5169]
  4. Siteman Cancer Center Flow Cytometry Core (National Cancer Institute) [P30CA91842]

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DNA hypomethylation is a characteristic of epidermal cells from aged and sun-exposed skin, with Dnmt3a deficiency potentially creating a premalignant state in the skin by increasing susceptibility to transformation through proliferative gene expression. DNMT3A loss may lead to a hyperproliferative phenotype and act as a tumor suppressor in the skin.
DNA hypomethylation is a feature of epidermal cells from aged and sun-exposed skin, but the mechanisms responsible for this methylation loss are not known. Dnmt3a is the dominant de novo DNA methyltransferase in the skin; while epidermal Dnmt3a deficiency creates a premalignant state in which keratinocytes are more easily transformed by topical mutagens, the conditions responsible for this increased susceptibility to transformation are not well understood. Using whole genome bisulfite sequencing, we identified a focal, canonical DNA hypomethylation phenotype in the epidermal cells of Dnmt3a-deficient mice. Single-cell transcriptomic analysis revealed an increased proportion of cells with a proliferative gene expression signature, while other populations in the skin were relatively unchanged. Although total DNMT3A deficiency has not been described in human disease states, rare patients with an over-growth syndrome associated with behavioral abnormalities and an increased risk of cancer often have heterozygous, germline mutations in DNMT3A that reduce its function (Tatton-Brown Rahman syndrome [TBRS]). We evaluated the DNA methylation phenotype of the skin from a TBRS patient with a germline DNMT3A(R882H) mutation, which encodes a dominant-negative protein that reduces its methyltransferase function by similar to 80%. We detected a focal, canonical hypomethylation phenotype that revealed considerable overlap with hypomethylated regions found in Dnmt3a-deficient mouse skin. Together, these data suggest that DNMT3A loss creates a premalignant epigenetic state associated with a hyperproliferative phenotype in the skin and further suggest that DNMT3A acts as a tumor suppressor in the skin.

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