AI Article Synopsis

  • DNA methylation is crucial for development, and its disruption is linked to various diseases, yet removing it in mouse models doesn’t significantly affect overall gene expression.
  • Loss of DNA methyltransferase DNMT3B specifically leads to the up-regulation of germline genes and defective placental formation, ultimately causing embryonic death.
  • The study explores how abnormal activity in germline pathways and proteins might interfere with normal development, particularly in syncytiotrophoblast cells.

Article Abstract

DNA methylation is a repressive epigenetic modification that is essential for development and its disruption is widely implicated in disease. Yet, remarkably, ablation of DNA methylation in transgenic mouse models has limited impact on transcriptional states. Across multiple tissues and developmental contexts, the predominant transcriptional signature upon loss of DNA methylation is the de-repression of a subset of germline genes, normally expressed in gametogenesis. We recently reported loss of de novo DNA methyltransferase DNMT3B resulted in up-regulation of germline genes and impaired syncytiotrophoblast formation in the murine placenta. This defect led to embryonic lethality. We hypothesize that de-repression of germline genes in the Dnmt3b knockout underpins aspects of the placental phenotype by interfering with normal developmental processes. Specifically, we discuss molecular mechanisms by which aberrant expression of the piRNA pathway, meiotic proteins or germline transcriptional regulators may disrupt syncytiotrophoblast development.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bies.202300140DOI Listing

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