4.8 Article

Mitochondrial genome undergoes de novo DNA methylation that protects mtDNA against oxidative damage during the peri-implantation window

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2201168119

Keywords

mitochondrial DNA; mitochondrial oxidative damage; de novo DNA methylation; DNMT3A/3B; peri-implantation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31930103]
  2. Chinese Universities Scientific Fund [2022TC019]
  3. National Key RD Program [2017YFD0501901, 2017YFD0501905]
  4. Beijing Innovation Consortium of Agriculture Research System

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This study reveals the dynamic process of mtDNA methylation during the critical developmental window and its role in maintaining mitochondrial genome stability. The researchers also discovered that DNA methyltransferase 3A and DNMT3B catalyze de novo mtDNA methylation and bind to mtDNA through their unique mitochondrial targeting sequences. The results demonstrate that increased mtDNA methylation functions to protect the mitochondrial genome against damage induced by mitochondrial oxidative stress.
Mitochondrial remodeling during the peri-implantation stage is the hallmark event essential for normal embryogenesis. Among the changes, enhanced oxidative phosphorylation is critical for supporting high energy demands of postimplantation embryos, but increases mitochondrial oxidative stress, which in turn threatens mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) stability. However, how mitochondria protect their own histone-lacking mtDNA, during this stage remains unclear. Concurrently, the mitochondrial genome gain DNA methylation by this stage. Its spatiotemporal coincidence with enhanced mitochondrial stress led us to ask if mtDNA methylation has a role in maintaining mitochondrial genome stability. Herein, we report that mitochondrial genome undergoes de novo mtDNA methylation that can protect mtDNA against enhanced oxidative damage during the peri-implantation window. Mitochondrial genome gains extensive mtDNA methylation during transition from blastocysts to postimplantation embryos, thus establishing relatively hypermethylated mtDNA from hypomethylated state in blastocysts. Mechanistic study revealed that DNA methyltransferase 3A (DNMT3A) and DNMT3B enter mitochondria during this process and bind to mtDNA, via their unique mitochondrial targeting sequences. Importantly, loss- and gain-of-function analyses indicated that DNMT3A and DNMT3B are responsible for catalyzing de novo mtDNA methylation, in a synergistic manner. Finally, we proved, in vivo and in vitro, that increased mtDNA methylation functions to protect mitochondrial genome against mtDNA damage induced by increased mitochondrial oxidative stress. Together, we reveal mtDNA methylation dynamics and its underlying mechanism during the critical developmental window. We also provide the functional link between mitochondrial epigenetic remodeling and metabolic changes, which reveals a role for nuclear-mitochondrial crosstalk in establishing mitoepigenetics and maintaining mitochondrial homeostasis.

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