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Researchers Decipher New Pathway for Risk-Free Gene Reactivation

Chemical modification of DNA subunits contribute to the regulation of gene expression. At Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) in Munich, researchers have now uncovered a new pathway that can reactivate genes that have been silenced via methylation. Unlike other known pathways, the newfound pathway does not lead to the generation of potentially deleterious intermediates.

In multicellular organisms, every cell contains the complete complement of genetic information characteristic of the particular species. However, in any given cell, only a subset of this comprehensive gene library is actually expressed- and it this selectivity that gives rise to diverse cell types with specific functions.

At the level of the DNA itself, simple chemical modifications of its subunits can determine which genes are active and which are turned off. But gene regulation must also be flexible, which requires that the activation and inactivation of genes should be reversible.

This therefore implies that it must also be possible to remove such DNA modifications. LMU researchers led by Professor Thomas Carell have now described a new mechanism for the reactivation of silenced genes which, unlike other known pathways, does not lead to the generation of potentially deleterious intermediates.

Methylation of one of

the four basic building blocks found in the DNA—the nucleotide base known as cytidine—plays an important role in the regulation of gene activity. The attachment of a methyl group (CH3) to unmethylated cytidine converts it into 5-methylcytidine, which is known to block gene activity.

Researchers Decipher New Pathway for Risk-Free Gene Reactivation

Tet enzymes oxidize 5-methyl-deoxycytidine (mdC) to 5-hydroxymethyl-dC (hmdC), 5-formyl-dC (fdC) and 5-carboxy-dC (cadC) in DNA,” the authors of the Nature Chemical Biology article explained. “It was proposed that fdC and cadC deformylate and decarboxylate, respectively, to dC over the course of an active demethylation process. This would re-install canonical dC bases at previously methylated sites.

Here we report the incorporation of synthetic isotope- and (R)-2′-fluorine-labeled dC and fdC derivatives into the genome of cultured mammalian cells,” reported LMU’s Thomas Carell, Ph.D., and colleagues. “Following the fate of these probe molecules using UHPLC–MS/MS [ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry] provided quantitative data about the formed reaction products.

Essentially, the LMU scientists collected data showing that the labeled fdC probe is efficiently converted into the corresponding labeled dC, most likely after its incorporation into the genome. The LMU team concluded that fdC undergoes C–C bond cleavage in stem cells, leading to the direct reinstallation of unmodified dC.

We have now shown in mouse embryonic stem cells that there is another mode of demethylation that avoids any break in the continuity of the DNA strand,” Carell says. In this pathway, the attached methyl group is enzymatically oxidized to give rise to 5-formylcytidine, which Carell’s team first detected in mouse stem cells in 2011.

They have now used stable isotopes to label 5-formylcytidine in stem cells and shown that it is rapidly converted unmethylated cytidine. “This mechanism thus allows cells to regulate gene activity at the DNA level without running the risk that the DNA may be damaged in the process,” Carell explains.

The authors of the new study believe that this pathway could also be of medical interest, as it may provide a way to reprogram stem cells in a targeted fashion. Such a method would in turn open up new perspectives in regenerative medicine.

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