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The DNA methylation landscape of human early embryos
Author(s) -
Hongshan Guo,
Ping Zhu,
Liying Yan,
Rong Li,
Boqiang Hu,
Ying Lian,
Jie Yan,
Xiaojun Ren,
Shengli Lin,
Junsheng Li,
Xiaohu Jin,
Xiaodan Shi,
Ping Liu,
Xiaoye Wang,
Wei Wang,
Wei Yuan,
Xianlong Li,
Fan Guo,
Xinglong Wu,
Xiaoying Fan,
Jun Yong,
Lu Wen,
Surui Xie,
Fuchou Tang
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature13544
Subject(s) - dna methylation , biology , pronucleus , epigenetics , genetics , methylation , dna demethylation , epigenomics , genome , embryo , maternal to zygotic transition , transposable element , zygote , human genome , bisulfite sequencing , gene , embryogenesis , gene expression
DNA methylation is a crucial element in the epigenetic regulation of mammalian embryonic development. However, its dynamic patterns have not been analysed at the genome scale in human pre-implantation embryos due to technical difficulties and the scarcity of required materials. Here we systematically profile the methylome of human early embryos from the zygotic stage through to post-implantation by reduced representation bisulphite sequencing and whole-genome bisulphite sequencing. We show that the major wave of genome-wide demethylation is complete at the 2-cell stage, contrary to previous observations in mice. Moreover, the demethylation of the paternal genome is much faster than that of the maternal genome, and by the end of the zygotic stage the genome-wide methylation level in male pronuclei is already lower than that in female pronuclei. The inverse correlation between promoter methylation and gene expression gradually strengthens during early embryonic development, reaching its peak at the post-implantation stage. Furthermore, we show that active genes, with the trimethylation of histone H3 at lysine 4 (H3K4me3) mark at the promoter regions in pluripotent human embryonic stem cells, are essentially devoid of DNA methylation in both mature gametes and throughout pre-implantation development. Finally, we also show that long interspersed nuclear elements or short interspersed nuclear elements that are evolutionarily young are demethylated to a milder extent compared to older elements in the same family and have higher abundance of transcripts, indicating that early embryos tend to retain higher residual methylation at the evolutionarily younger and more active transposable elements. Our work provides insights into the critical features of the methylome of human early embryos, as well as its functional relation to the regulation of gene expression and the repression of transposable elements.

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