Methylation of the mouse hprt gene differs on the active and inactive X chromosomes.
Open Access
- 1 March 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 6 (3), 914-924
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.6.3.914
Abstract
It has been proposed that DNA methylation is involved in the mechanism of X inactivation, the process by which equivalence of levels of X-linked gene products is achieved in female (XX) and male (XY) mammals. In this study, Southern blots of female and male DNA digested with methylation-sensitive restriction endonucleases and hybridized to various portions of the cloned mouse hprt gene were compared, and sites within the mouse hprt gene were identified that are differentially methylated in female and male cells. The extent to which these sites are methylated when carried on the active and inactive X chromosomes was directly determined in a similar analysis of DNA from clonal cell lines established from a female embryo derived from a mating of two species of mouse, Mus musculus and Mus caroli. The results revealed two regions of differential methylation in the mouse hprt gene. One region, in the first intron of the gene, includes four sites that are completely unmethylated when carried on the active X and extensively methylated when carried on the inactive X. These same sites are extensively demethylated in hprt genes reactivated either spontaneously or after 5-azacytidine treatment. The second region includes several sites in the 3' 20kilobases of the gene extending from exon 3 to exon 9 that show the converse pattern; i.e., they are completely methylated when carried on the active X and completely unmethylated when carried on the inactive X. At least one of these sites does not become methylated after reactivation of the gene. The results of this study, together with the results of previous studies by others of the human hprt gene, indicate that these regions of differential methylation on the active and inactive X are conserved between mammalian species. Furthermore, the data described here are consistent with the idea that at least the sites in the 5' region of the gene play a role in the X inactivation phenomenon and regulation of expression of the mouse hprt gene.This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Clusters of CpG dinucleotides implicated by nuclease hypersensitivity as control elements of housekeeping genesNature, 1985
- Genomic analysis of the H-2 complex region associated with mouse t HaplotypesCell, 1982
- Unusual methylation pattern of the α2(I) collagen geneCell, 1982
- X chromosome activity in female germ cells of mice heterozygous for Searle's translocation T(X;16)16HGenetics Research, 1981
- Quantitative evaluation of electrophoretic allo‐ and isozyme patternsFEBS Letters, 1980
- X–chromosome inactivation during differentiation of female teratocarcinoma stem cells in vitroNature, 1978
- Doublet frequency analysis of fractionated vertebrate nuclear DNAJournal of Molecular Biology, 1976
- Ontogeny of X-chromosome inactivation in the female germ lineExperimental Cell Research, 1975
- X inactivation, differentiation, and DNA methylationCytogenetic and Genome Research, 1975
- Selection of Hybrids from Matings of Fibroblasts in vitro and Their Presumed RecombinantsScience, 1964