DNA methylation is a crucial epigenetic modification that orchestrates chromatin remodelers that suppress transcription, and aberrations in DNA methylation result in a variety of conditions such as cancers and developmental disorders. While it is understood that methylation occurs at CpG-rich DNA regions, it is less understood how distinct methylation profiles are established within various cell types. In this work, we develop a molecular-transport model that depicts the genomic exploration of DNA methyltransferase within a multiscale DNA environment, incorporating biologically relevant factors like methylation rate and CpG density to predict how patterns are established. Our model predicts DNA methylation-state correlation distributions arising from the transport and kinetic properties that are crucial for the establishment of unique methylation profiles. We model the methylation correlation distributions of nine cancerous human cell types to determine how these properties affect the epigenetic profile. Our theory is capable of recapitulating experimental methylation patterns, suggesting the importance of DNA methyltransferase transport in epigenetic regulation. Through this work, we propose a mechanistic description for the establishment of methylation profiles, capturing the key behavioral characteristics of methyltransferase that lead to aberrant methylation.
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Locally correlated kinetics of post-replication DNA methylation reveals processivity and region specificity in DNA methylation maintenance
DNA methylation occurs predominantly on cytosine-phosphate-guanine (CpG) dinucleotides in the mammalian genome, and the methylation landscape is maintained over mitotic cell division. It has been posited that coupling of maintenance methylation activity among neighbouring CpGs is critical to stability over cellular generations; however, the mechanism is unclear. We used mathematical models and stochastic simulation to analyse data from experiments that probe genome-wide methylation of nascent DNA post-replication in cells. We find that DNA methylation maintenance rates on individual CpGs are locally correlated, and the degree of this correlation varies by genomic regional context. By using theory of protein diffusion along DNA, we show that exponential decay of methylation rate correlation with genomic distance is consistent with enzyme processivity. Our results provide quantitative evidence of genome-wide methyltransferase processivity in vivo . We further developed a method to disentangle different mechanistic sources of kinetic correlations. From the experimental data, we estimate that an individual methyltransferase methylates neighbour CpGs processively if they are 36 basepairs apart, on average. But other mechanisms of coupling dominate for longer inter-CpG distances. Our study demonstrates that quantitative insights into enzymatic mechanisms can be obtained from replication-associated, cell-based genome-wide measurements, by combining data-driven statistical analyses with hypothesis-driven mathematical modelling.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1763272
- PAR ID:
- 10412768
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of The Royal Society Interface
- Volume:
- 19
- Issue:
- 195
- ISSN:
- 1742-5662
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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