Neuronal non-CG methylation is an essential target for MeCP2 function

神经元非CG甲基化是MeCP2功能的重要靶点。

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作者:Rebekah Tillotson ,Justyna Cholewa-Waclaw ,Kashyap Chhatbar ,John C Connelly ,Sophie A Kirschner ,Shaun Webb ,Martha V Koerner ,Jim Selfridge ,David A Kelly ,Dina De Sousa ,Kyla Brown ,Matthew J Lyst ,Skirmantas Kriaucionis ,Adrian Bird

Abstract

DNA methylation is implicated in neuronal biology via the protein MeCP2, the mutation of which causes Rett syndrome. MeCP2 recruits the NCOR1/2 co-repressor complexes to methylated cytosine in the CG dinucleotide, but also to sites of non-CG methylation, which are abundant in neurons. To test the biological significance of the dual-binding specificity of MeCP2, we replaced its DNA binding domain with an orthologous domain from MBD2, which can only bind mCG motifs. Knockin mice expressing the domain-swap protein displayed severe Rett-syndrome-like phenotypes, indicating that normal brain function requires the interaction of MeCP2 with sites of non-CG methylation, specifically mCAC. The results support the notion that the delayed onset of Rett syndrome is due to the simultaneous post-natal accumulation of mCAC and its reader MeCP2. Intriguingly, genes dysregulated in both Mecp2 null and domain-swap mice are implicated in other neurological disorders, potentially highlighting targets of relevance to the Rett syndrome phenotype. Keywords: DNA methylation; MeCP2; Rett syndrome; epigenetic reader; mouse; neuronal maintenance; transcriptional regulation.

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