4.6 Review Book Chapter

Programming of DNA Methylation Patterns

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF BIOCHEMISTRY, VOL 81
Volume 81, Issue -, Pages 97-117

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-biochem-052610-091920

Keywords

maintenance; repression; chromatin; development; reprogramming; imprinting

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DNA methylation represents a form of genome annotation that mediates gene repression by serving as a maintainable mark that can be used to reconstruct silent chromatin following each round of replication. During development, germline DNA methylation is erased in the blastocyst, and a bimodal pattern is established anew at the time of implantation when the entire genome gets methylated while CpG islands are protected. This brings about global repression and allows housekeeping genes to be expressed in all cells of the body. Postimplantation development is characterized by stage- and tissue-specific changes in methylation that ultimately mold the epigenetic patterns that define each individual cell type. This is directed by sequence information in DNA and represents a secondary event that provides long-term expression stability. Abnormal methylation changes play a role in diseases, such as cancer or fragile X syndrome, and may also occur as a function of aging or as a result of environmental influences.

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