4.7 Article

Dimethyl sulfoxide has an impact on epigenetic profile in mouse embryoid body

Journal

STEM CELLS
Volume 24, Issue 11, Pages 2549-2556

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1634/stemcells.2005-0427

Keywords

dimethyl sulfoxide; DNA methylation; epigenetics; differentiation; DNA methyltransferase

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Dimethyl sulfoxide ( DMSO), an amphipathic molecule, is widely used not only as a solvent for water-insoluble substances but also as a cryopreservant for various types of cells. Exposure to DMSO sometimes causes unexpected changes in cell fates. Because mammalian development and cellular differentiation are controlled epigenetically by DNA methylation and histone modifications, DMSO likely affects the epigenetic system. The effects of DMSO on transcription of three major DNA methyltransferases (Dnmts) and five well-studied histone modification enzymes were examined in mouse embryonic stem cells and embryoid bodies (EBs) by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Addition of DMSO (0.02% - 1.0%) to EBs in culture induced an increase in Dnmt3a mRNA levels with increasing dosage. Increased expression of two subtypes of Dnmt3a in protein levels was confirmed by Western blotting. Southern blot analysis revealed that DMSO caused hypermethylation of two kinds of repetitive sequences in EBs. Furthermore, restriction landmark genomic scanning, by which DNA methylation status can be analyzed on thousands of loci in genic regions, revealed that DMSO affected DNA methylation status at multiple loci, inducing hypomethylation as well as hypermethylation depending on the genomic loci. In conclusion, DMSO has an impact on the epigenetic profile: upregulation of Dnmt3a expression and alteration of genome-wide DNA methylation profiles with phenotypic changes in EBs.

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