English
Adjective
- of, or relating to epigenesis
- of, or relating to epigenetics
In
biology, the term epigenetics
refers to changes in
gene
expression that are stable between
cell
divisions, and sometimes
between generations, but do not involve changes in the underlying
DNA sequence of
the organism. Basically, it is a term used to describe the idea
that environmental factors can cause an organism's genes to behave
(or "express themselves") differently, even though the genes
themselves don't change. The molecular basis of epigenetics
involves modifications to
DNA and the
chromatin proteins that
associate with it. Epigenetics is a fundamental part of
eukaryotic biology, and is
perhaps most elegantly illustrated in the process of
cellular differentiation,
which allows cells to stably maintain different characteristics
despite containing the same genomic material. Epigenetic states are
inherited when cells divide, and although most of these states are
considered dynamic over the course of development in multicellular
organisms, some epigenetic features show transgenerational
inheritance and are inherited from one generation to the
next.
Specific epigenetic processes include
paramutation,
bookmarking,
imprinting,
gene
silencing,
X chromosome
inactivation,
position
effect,
reprogramming,
transvection,
maternal
effects, the progress of
carcinogenesis, many
effects of
teratogens,
regulation of
histone
modifications and
heterochromatin, and
technical limitations affecting
parthenogenesis and
cloning.
Epigenetic research uses a wide range of
molecular biologic techniques to further our understanding of
epigenetic phenomena, including
chromatin immunoprecipitation (together with its large-scale
variants
ChIP-on-chip
and
ChIP-seq),
fluorescent in situ hybridization, methylation-sensitive
restriction
enzymes, DNA adenine methyltransferase identification (
DamID) and
bisulfite
sequencing. Furthermore, the use of
bioinformatic methods is
playing an increasing role (
computational
epigenetics).
Etymology and definitions
The word "epigenetics" has been
associated with many different definitions, and much of the
confusion surrounding the use of the word "epigenetics" relates to
the fact that it was originally defined to explain phenomena
without knowing their molecular basis and with time became narrowly
linked to certain phenomena as their molecular basis was
discovered.
The word "epigenetics" (as in "
epigenetic
landscape") was coined by
C. H.
Waddington in 1942 as a
portmanteau of the words
"
genetics" and
"
epigenesis".
Epigenesis is an older word used to describe the differentiation of
cells from a
totipotent state in embryonic
development (used in contrast to "preformationism"). At the time
Waddington first used the term "epigenetics," the physical nature
of genes and their role in heredity was not known. Epigenetics was
Waddington's model of how genes within a multicellular organism
interact with their surroundings to produce a
phenotype. Because all cells
within an organism inherit the same DNA sequences,
cellular
differentiation processes crucial for epigenesis rely strongly
on epigenetic rather than genetic inheritance.
Robin
Holliday defined epigenetics as "the study of the mechanisms of
temporal and spatial control of gene activity during the
development of complex organisms." Thus, the word "epigenetic" can
be used to describe any aspect other than DNA sequence that
influences the development of an organism.
Another usage of the word "epigenetics" was
employed by the psychologist
Erik
Erikson, who developed an "epigenetic theory of human
development," which focuses on psycho-social crises.
The modern usage of the word "epigenetic" is
usually more narrow, referring to heritable traits (over rounds of
cell division and sometimes transgenerationally) that do not
involve changes to the underlying DNA sequence. The Greek prefix
"epi-" in the word "epigenetics" implies features that are "on top
of" or "in addition to" genetics, and the current usage of the word
reflects this—epigenetic traits exist on top of or in
addition to the traditional molecular basis for inheritance.
The similarity of the word to "genetics" has
generated many parallel usages. The "epigenome" is a parallel to
the word "
genome," and
refers to the overall epigenetic state of a cell. The phrase
"
genetic
code" has also been adapted—the "
epigenetic
code" has been used to describe the set of epigenetic features
that create different phenotypes in different cells. Taken to its
extreme, the "epigenetic code" could represent the total state of
the cell, with the position of each molecule accounted for; more
typically, the term is used in reference to systematic efforts to
measure specific, relevant forms of epigenetic information such as
the
histone
code or
DNA
methylation patterns.
Mechanisms
Several types of epigenetic inheritance systems
may play a role in what has become known as cell memory:
DNA methylation and chromatin remodeling
Because the
phenotype of a cell or
individual is affected by which of its genes are transcribed,
heritable
transcription
states can give rise to epigenetic effects. There are several
layers of regulation of
gene
expression, one of which is remodeling of chromatin, the
complex of DNA and the
histone proteins with which it
associates. Chromatin remodeling is initiated by one of two things:
-
posttranslational modification of the amino acids that make up
histone proteins,
- or the addition of methyl groups to the DNA, at CpG sites, to
convert cytosine to 5-methylcytosine.
Whereas
DNA is not completely stripped of
nucleosomes during
replication, it is possible that the remaining modified histones
may act as templates, initiating identical modification of
surrounding new histones after deposition. DNA methylation has a
more clear method of propagation through the preferential
methylation of hemimethylated symmetric sites by enzymes like Dnmt
1.
Although modifications occur throughout the
histone sequence, the unstructured termini of histones (called
histone tails) are particularly highly modified. These
modifications include
acetylation,
methylation and
ubiquitylation.
Acetylation is the most highly studied of these modifications. For
example, acetylation of the K14 and K9
lysines of the tail of histone H3
by histone acetyltransferase enzymes (HATs) is generally correlated
with transcriptional competence. One mode of thinking is that this
tendency of acetylation to be associated with "active"
transcription is biophysical in nature. Because lysine normally has
a positive charge on the nitrogen at its end, lysine can bind the
negatively charged phosphates of the DNA backbone and prevent them
from repelling each other. The acetylation event converts the
positively charged amine group on the side chain into a neutral
amide linkage. This removes the positive charge causing the DNA to
repel itself. When this occurs, complexes like SWI/SNF and other
transcriptional factors can bind to the DNA, thus opening it up and
exposing it to enzymes like
RNA
polymerase so transcription of the gene can occur.
In addition, the positively charged tails of
histone proteins from one nucleosome may interact with the histone
proteins on a neighboring nucleosome, causing them to pack closely.
Lysine acetylation may interfere with these interactions, causing
the chromatin structure to open up.
Lysine acetylation may also act as a beacon to
recruit other activating chromatin modifying enzymes (and basal
transcription machinery as well). Indeed, the
bromodomain—a protein segment (domain) that specifically
binds acetyl-lysine—is found in many enzymes that help
activate transcription including the SWI/SNF complex (on the
protein polybromo). It may be that acetylation acts in this and the
previous way to aid in transcriptional activation.
The idea that modifications act as docking
modules for related factors is borne out by histone methylation as
well. Methylation of lysine 9 of histone H3 has long been
associated with constitutively transcriptionally silent chromatin
(constitutive
heterochromatin). It has
been determined that a chromodomain (a domain that specifically
binds methyl-lysine) in the transcriptionally repressive protein
HP1
recruits HP1 to K9 methylated regions. One example that seems to
refute the biophysical model for acetylation is that
tri-methylation of histone H3 at lysine 4 is strongly associated
with (and required for full) transcriptional activation.
Tri-methylation in this case would introduce a fixed positive
charge on the tail.
It should be emphasized that differing histone
modifications are likely to function in differing ways; acetylation
at one position is likely to function differently than acetylation
at another position. Also, multiple modifications may occur at the
same time, and these modifications may work together to change the
behavior of the nucleosome. The idea that multiple dynamic
modifications regulate gene transcription in a systematic and
reproducible way is called the
histone
code.
DNA methylation frequently occurs in repeated
sequences, and may help to suppress '
junk DNA':
Because
5-methylcytosine
is chemically very similar to
thymidine, CpG sites are
frequently mutated and become rare in the genome, except at
CpG
islands where they remain unmethylated. Epigenetic changes of
this type thus have the potential to direct increased frequencies
of permanent genetic mutation.
DNA
methylation patterns are known to be established and modified
in response to environmental factors by a complex interplay of at
least three independent
DNA
methyltransferases, DNMT1, DNMT3A and DNMT3B, the loss of any
of which is lethal in mice. DNMT1 is the most abundant
methyltransferase in somatic cells, localizes to replication foci,
has a 10–40-fold preference for hemimethylated DNA and interacts
with the proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). By
preferentially modifying hemimethylated DNA, DNMT1 transfers
patterns of methylation to a newly synthesized strand after
DNA
replication, and therefore is often referred to as the
‘maintenance' methyltransferase. DNMT1 is essential for proper
embryonic development, imprinting and X-inactivation.
Chromosomal regions can adopt stable and
heritable alternative states resulting in bistable gene expression
without changes to the DNA sequence. Epigenetic control is often
associated with alternative covalent modifications of histones. The
stability and heritability of states of larger chromosomal regions
are often thought to involve positive feedback where modified
nucleosomes recruit enzymes that similarly modify nearby
nucleosomes. A simplified stochastic model for this type of
epigenetics is found
here
.
Because DNA methylation and chromatin remodeling
play such a central role in many types of epigenic inheritance, the
word "epigenetics" is sometimes used as a synonym for these
processes. However, this can be misleading. Chromatin remodeling is
not always inherited, and not all epigenetic inheritance involves
chromatin remodeling.
It has been suggested that the
histone code
could be mediated by the effect of small RNAs. The recent discovery
and characterization of a vast array of small (21- to 26-nt),
non-coding RNAs suggests that there is an RNA component, possibly
involved in epigenetic gene regulation. Small interfering RNAs can
modulate transcriptional gene expression via epigenetic modulation
of targeted
promoters.
RNA transcripts and their encoded proteins
Sometimes a
gene, after being turned on, transcribes a product that (either
directly or indirectly) maintains the activity of that gene. For
example,
Hnf4
and
MyoD
enhance the transcription of many liver- and muscle-specific genes,
respectively, including their own, through the
transcription
factor activity of the
proteins they encode. Other
epigenetic changes are mediated by the production of different
splice
forms of
RNA, or by formation of
double-stranded RNA (
RNAi). Descendants of
the cell in which the gene was turned on will inherit this
activity, even if the original stimulus for gene-activation is no
longer present. These genes are most often turned on or off by
signal
transduction, although in some systems where
syncytia or
gap
junctions are important, RNA may spread directly to other cells
or nuclei by
diffusion. A large amount of
RNA and protein is contributed to the
zygote by the mother during
oogenesis or via
nurse
cells, resulting in
maternal
effect phenotypes. A smaller quantity of sperm RNA is
transmitted from the father, but there is recent evidence that this
epigenetic information can lead to visible changes in several
generations of offspring.
Prions
details
Prions Prions are infectious
forms of
proteins.
Proteins generally fold into discrete units which perform distinct
cellular functions, but some proteins are also capable of forming
an infectious conformational state known as a prion. Although often
viewed in the context of
infectious disease, prions are more loosely defined by their
ability to catalytically convert other native state versions of the
same protein to an infectious conformational state. It is in this
latter sense that they can be viewed as epigenetic agents capable
of inducing a phenotypic change without a modification of the
genome.
Fungal
prions are considered epigenetic because the infectious
phenotype caused by the prion can be inherited without modification
of the genome.
PSI+ and
URE3, discovered in
yeast
in 1965 and 1971, are the two best studied of this type of prion.
Prions can have a phenotypic effect through the sequestration of
protein in aggregates, thereby reducing that protein's activity. In
PSI+ cells, the loss of the Sup35 protein (which is involved in
termination of translation) causes ribosomes to have a higher rate
of read-through of stop codons, an effect which results in
suppression of
nonsense
mutations in other genes. The ability of Sup35 to form prions
may be a conserved trait. It could confer an adaptive advantage by
giving cells the ability to switch into a PSI+ state and express
dormant genetic features normally terminated by premature stop
codon mutations.
Structural inheritance systems
details
Structural
inheritance
In
ciliates such as
Tetrahymena and
Paramecium,
genetically identical cells show heritable differences in the
patterns of ciliary rows on their cell surface. Experimentally
altered patterns can be transmitted to daughter cells. It seems
existing structures act as templates for new structures. The
mechanisms of such inheritance are unclear, but reasons exist to
assume that multicellular organisms also use existing cell
structures to assemble new ones.
Functions and consequences
Development
Somatic epigenetic inheritance, particularly
through DNA methylation and chromatin remodeling, is very important
in the development of multicellular eukaryotic organisms. The
genome sequence is static (with some notable exceptions), but cells
differentiate in many different types, which perform different
functions, and respond differently to the environment and
intercellular signalling. Thus, as individuals develop,
morphogens activate or silence
genes in an epigenetically heritable fashion, giving cells a
"memory". In mammals, most cells terminally differentiate, with
only
stem
cells retaining the ability to differentiate into several cell
types ("totipotency" and "multipotency"). In mammals, some stem
cells continue producing new differentiated cells throughout life,
but mammals are not able to respond to loss of some tissues, for
example, the inability to regenerate limbs, which some other
animals are capable of. Unlike animals, plant cells do not
terminally differentiate, remaining totipotent with the ability to
give rise to a new individual plant. While plants do utilise many
of the same epigenetic mechanisms as animals, such as chromatin
remodeling, it has been hypothesised that plant cells do not have
"memories", resetting their gene expression patterns at each cell
division using positional information from the environment and
surrounding cells to determine their fate.
Medicine
Epigenetics has many and varied potential medical
applications. Congenital genetic disease is well understood, and it
is also clear that epigenetics can play a role, for example, in the
case of
Angelman
syndrome and
Prader-Willi
syndrome. These are normal genetic diseases caused by gene
deletions, but are unusually common because individuals are
essentially
hemizygous because of
genomic
imprinting, and therefore a single gene knock out is sufficient
to cause the disease, where most cases would require both copies to
be knocked out.
Evolution
Although epigenetics in multicellular organisms
is generally thought to be a mechanism involved in differentiation,
with epigenetic patterns "reset" when organisms reproduce, there
have been some observations of transgenerational epigenetic
inheritance (e.g., the phenomenon of
paramutation observed in
maize). Although most of these multigenerational epigenetic traits
are gradually lost over several generations, the possibility
remains that multigenerational epigenetics could be another aspect
to evolution and adaptation. These effects may require enhancements
to the standard conceptual framework of the
modern evolutionary synthesis.
Epigenetic features may play a role in short-term
adaptation of species by allowing for reversible phenotype
variability. The modification of epigenetic features associated
with a region of DNA allows organisms, on a multigenerational time
scale, to switch between phenotypes that express and repress that
particular gene. Whereas the DNA sequence of the region is not
mutated, this change is reversible. It has also been speculated
that organisms may take advantage of differential mutation rates
associated with epigenetic features to control the mutation rates
of particular genes.
Epigenetic effects in humans
Genomic imprinting and related disorders
Some human
disorders are associated with genomic imprinting, a phenomenon in
mammals where the father and mother contribute different epigenetic
patterns for specific genomic loci in their germ cells. The most
well-known case of imprinting in human disorders is that of
Angelman
syndrome and
Prader-Willi
syndrome—both can be produced by the same genetic
mutation,
chromosome 15q partial deletion, and the particular syndrome
that will develop depends on whether the mutation is inherited from
the child's mother or from their father. This is due to the
presence of
genomic
imprinting in the region.
Beckwith-Wiedemann
syndrome is also associated with genomic imprinting, often
caused by abnormalities in maternal genomic imprinting of a region
on chromosome 11.
Transgenerational epigenetic observations
Marcus Pembrey
and colleagues also observed that the paternal (but not maternal)
grandsons of Swedish boys who were exposed to famine in the 19th
century were less likely to die of cardiovascular disease; if food
was plentiful then
diabetes mortality in the
grandchildren increased, suggesting that this was a
transgenerational epigenetic inheritance.
Cancer and developmental abnormalities
A variety of
compounds are considered as epigenetic
carcinogens—they
result in an increased incidence of tumors, but they do not show
mutagen activity
(toxic compounds or pathogens that cause tumors incident to
increased regeneration should also be excluded). Examples include
diethylstilbestrol,
arsenite,
hexachlorobenzene,
and
nickel
compounds.
Many teratogens exert specific effects on the
fetus by epigenetic mechanisms. While epigenetic effects may
preserve the effect of a teratogen such as
diethylstilbestrol
throughout the life of an affected child, the possibility of birth
defects resulting from exposure of fathers or in second and
succeeding generations of offspring has generally been rejected on
theoretical grounds and for lack of evidence. However, a range of
male-mediated abnormalities have been demonstrated, and more are
likely to exist.
FDA label
information for Vidaza(tm), a formulation of
5-azacitidine
(an unmethylatable analog of cytidine that causes hypomethylation
when incorporated into DNA) states that "men should be advised not
to father a child" while using the drug, citing evidence in treated
male mice of reduced fertility, increased embryo loss, and abnormal
embryo development. In rats, endocrine differences were observed in
offspring of males exposed to morphine. In mice, second generation
effects of diethylstilbesterol have been described occurring by
epigenetic mechanisms.
Epigenetics in microorganisms
Bacteria make widespread use
of postreplicative DNA methylation for the epigenetic control of
DNA-protein interactions. Bacteria make use of DNA adenine
methylation (rather than DNA cytosine methylation) as an epigenetic
signal. DNA adenine methylation is important in bacteria virulence
in organisms such as
Escherichia
coli,
Salmonella,
Vibrio,
Yersinia,
Haemophilus,
and
Brucella. In
Alphaproteobacteria,
methylation of adenine regulates the cell cycle and couples gene
transcription to DNA replication. In
Gammaproteobacteria,
adenine methylation provides signals for DNA replication,
chromosome segregation, mismatch repair, packaging of
bacteriophage, transposase activity and regulation of gene
expression.
The
yeast prion PSI is generated by a
conformational change of a translation termination factor, which is
then inherited by daughter cells. This can provide a survival
advantage under adverse conditions. This is an example of
epigenetic regulation enabling unicellular organisms to respond
rapidly to environmental stress. Prions can be viewed as epigenetic
agents capable of inducing a phenotypic change without modification
of the genome.
Further reading
- Oskar
Hertwig, 1849-1922. Biological problem of today: preformation
or epigenesis? The basis of a theory of organic development. W.
Heinemann: London, 1896.
- R. Jaenisch and A. Bird (2003) Epigenetic regulation of gene
expression: how the genome integrates intrinsic and environmental
signals. Nat. Genet. 33 (Suppl) 245-254.
- Joshua
Lederberg, "The Meaning of Epigenetics", The Scientist
15(18):6, Sep. 17, 2001.
- R. J. Sims III, K. Nishioka and D. Reinberg (2003) Histone
lysine methylation: a signature for chromatin function. Trends
Genet. 19, 629-637.
- Rupert Sheldrake, A New Biology, morphogenetic fields.
- B. D. Strahl and C. D. Allis (2000) The language of covalent
histone modifications. Nature 403, 41-45.
- C.H.
Waddington (1942), "The
epigenotype". Endeavour 1, 18–20.
- B. McClintock (1978) Mechanisms that Rapidly Reorganize the
Genome. Stadler Symposium vol 10:25-48
- G.W. Grimes; K.J. Aufderheide; Cellular Aspects of Pattern
Formation: the Problem of Assembly. Monographs in Developmental
Biology, Vol. 22. Karger, Basel (1991)
- Eva
Jablonka and Marion J.
Lamb Evolution in Four Dimensions: Genetic, Epigenetic,
Behavioral, and Symbolic Variation in the History of Life The MIT
Press (2005) ISBN 978-0262101073
- Article
on The Philosophy of Molecular and Developmental Biology to
appear in Blackwell’s Guide to Philosophy of Science,. P.K.
Machamer and M. Silberstein (Eds).
- Epigenetics
edited by C. David Allis, Thomas Jenuwein, Danny Reinberg, and
Marie-Laure Caparros. Cold Spring Harbor Press, 2007.
- Evolution by
Nicholas Barton, Derek Briggs, Jonathan Eisen, David Goldstein, and
Nipam Patel. Cold Spring Harbor Press, 2007.
-
Chromatin and Gene Regulation: Mechanisms in Epigenetics by
Bryan Turner. Blackwell Publishing, 2002.
-
Survival of the Sickest by Dr. Sharon Moalem with Jonathan
Prince, Published 2007
- Epigenetics
edited by J. Tost. Caister Academic Press, 2008.
- RNA and the
Regulation of Gene Expression: A Hidden Layer of Complexity
edited by K. V. Morris. Caister Academic Press, 2008.
Notes and references
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