Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Chromatin and Epigenetics
- Epigenetics - The study of mitotically (between
cells) and/or meiotically (between generations)
heritable changes in gene function that are not
explainable by changes in DNA sequence
- All somatic cells in an
organism have identical
genes, but these are
used differently
depending on the cell
- Genes become
programmed during
development
- Genetic inheritance
allows the daughter cells
to retain a memory of the
gene expression patterns
present in the parent cell
- Cells can be
reprogrammed to
produce something
different
- Developmental
events can be
influenced by
the epigenetic
state of the cell
- Some events are stochastic
gene programming events,
meaning that there is a random
probability distribution of
different versions occurring
- X Chromosome Inactivation
- Males (XY) and
females (XX) have
different numbers
of X chromosomes
- Cells are sensitive
to gene dosage, and
this can sometimes
be lethal
- Dosage compensation
mechanism in mammals
to equalise this difference
in gene quantity
- One of the two X
chromosomes in
female somatic cells
are transcriptionally
inactive
- Once inactivated, it
will remain that way
in all of the daughter
cells that it produces
- Random
inactivation
- Inactivated by being condensed
- Many parts to
the process
- Chromatin
- Complex of DNA,
histones and other
non-histone proteins
found in the nucleus
of a eukaryotic cell
- This is the
material from what
chromosomes are
made
- Condensed
and packed
into compact
chromosomes
- These contain
nucleosomes, which
are regularly repeating
protein-DNA
complexes
- Nucleosomes consist
of a histone octamer
with two turns of DNA
wrapped around it
(147bp)
- The histone octamer
consists of two copies
each of histones H2A,
H2B, H3 and H4 (eight
in total)
- H2A and H2B bind
to form two dimers,
and H3 and H4 form
another two dimers
- Each of the core histones
has an N-terminal tail, which
extrudes from the surface of
the nucleosome, which may
help to pack the
nucleosomes, forming higher
order chromatin structures
- These tails can also be
subjected to various
forms of covalent
modifications such as
acetylation, methylation
and phosphorylation
- A combination of
different modifications
can be found on
histones, all of which are
reversible and created by
a specific enzyme
- e.g. an acetyl group is
added to specific
lysines by a set of
different histone acetyl
transferases (HATs)
- Histone Modifications
- A series of coordinated
histone modifications
can modulate the
chromatin, and thereby
the transcriptional
activity of a gene
- This hypothesis
is known as the
histone code
- The DNA sequence of an
individual stores the
genetic information and is
invarient and so different
cell types have differetn
eipgenomes (overall
genetic state of a cell)
- DNA Methylation
- Non-coding RNAs
- Cytosine Methylation
- Common form of
post-replicative
DNA modification
- Adds information
without changing
the actual DNA
sequence
- S-adenosyl
methionine
(SAM) donates
the methyl group
- DNA methylation
depends on the
availability of methyl
groups from SAM
- Other modifications
exist and each has
its own function
- Predominant sites
of cytosine
methylation are the
CpG dinucleotides
- CpG islands are
regions of high
CpG density that
lack methylation
- They are found at
promoters of most
human genes
- Long-term silencing
of the gene can be
established by
methylation of the
CpG island region
- Genes on the inactive
X chromosome and
certain imprinted genes
are silenced in this way
- Reversible, but
can be inherited to
the daughter cells
after replication
- There are many
potential sites along the
DNA for methylation
- Methylating the gene
inactivates it and
prevents transcription
- Genomic Imprinting
- Epigenetic
mechanism that
induces
parental-specific
gene expression in
diploid cells
- Maternal and paternal
genomes are required for
mammalian reproduction,
and so all offspring are
diploid maternal/paternal
- Nuclear transfer techniques
have been used to replace
the male nucleus in the
zygote with another female
nucleus, resulting in a diploid
maternal/maternal
(gynogenetic) embyro
- These die during early
developmental stages,
as do diploid
paternal/paternal
(androgenetic) embryos
- Proves that imprinted
genes are needed for
successful development,
which are specific to
either the maternal or
paternal genome
- Most imprinted
genes are clustered,
and controlled by a
cis-acting imprint
control element (ICE)
- These carry an
epigenetic imprint (i.e.
methylated region)
that has been
inherited from one of
the parental gametes
- If the paternal allele's
ICE is methylated, and
the maternal allele's ICE
is unmethylated, the
maternal allele with be
transcribed
- Mostly cluster together
with a non-coding RNA,
and play a vital role in
mammalian development
- Maintenance
methylation
- Occurs after DNA replication
- New strand is methylated
so that it matches the old
one, in preparation for
future replications
- A class of proteins called
the methyl-CpG binding
proteins are attached to
methylated cytosines
instead of being repelled
by them
- They share a
methyl-CpG
binding domain
(MBD)
- Some of these
proteins are
involved in the
repression of
transcription
- Double stranded RNA is produced by special
types of transcription of the DNA strand, such
as bidirectional transcription, inverted repeat
transcription, and aberrant transcription
- RNA interference is a defence
mechanism aimed to degrade foreign,
dsRNA, which is often derived from
viruses and other transposable elements
- Protein complex contains
Dicer nuclease, which
cuts dsRNA into
fragments called small
interfering RNAs (siRNA)