Publications by authors named "Nina Bailly"

DNA and Histone 3 Lysine 27 methylation typically function as repressive modifications and operate within distinct genomic compartments. In mammals, the majority of the genome is kept in a DNA methylated state, whereas the Polycomb repressive complexes regulate the unmethylated CpG-rich promoters of developmental genes. In contrast to this general framework, the extra-embryonic lineages display non-canonical, globally intermediate DNA methylation levels, including disruption of local Polycomb domains.

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In 1925, 5-methylcytosine was first reported in bacteria. However, its biological importance was not intuitive for several decades. After this initial lag, the ubiquitous presence of this methylated base emerged across all domains of life and revealed a range of essential biological functions.

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Article Synopsis
  • DNA methylation is essential during development for repressing retrotransposons, with key enzymes being Dnmt1 for maintenance and Dnmt3a/3b for de novo activity.
  • Research shows that Dnmt1 also has de novo methylation capabilities and specifically targets retrotransposons, which was analyzed using advanced sequencing techniques in methylation-depleted mouse embryonic stem cells.
  • The activity of Dnmt1 is dependent on Uhrf1, and its recruitment overlaps with certain epigenetic markers, indicating its dual role in both maintaining and initiating DNA methylation for stable repression during development.*
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Mammalian cells stably maintain high levels of DNA methylation despite expressing both positive (DNMT3A/B) and negative (TET1-3) regulators. Here, we analyzed the independent and combined effects of these regulators on the DNA methylation landscape using a panel of knockout human embryonic stem cell (ESC) lines. The greatest impact on global methylation levels was observed in DNMT3-deficient cells, including reproducible focal demethylation at thousands of normally methylated loci.

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