Volume 270,
Number 2,
Issue of January 13, 1995 pp. 788-792
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Epigenetic
Gene Inactivation Induced by a Cis-acting Methylation Center
(Received for publication, October 18,
1994; and in revised form, November 3, 1994)
Padmaja
Mummaneni
,
Kimberly A.
Walker
,
Peggy L.
Bishop
,
Mitchell S.
Turker
In this report we test the hypothesis that a cis-acting
methylation center can induce epigenetic gene inactivation. The
cis-acting element used is an 838-base pair fragment that was shown
previously to provide a de novo methylation signal (Mummaneni,
P., Bishop, P. L., and Turker, M. S.(1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268,
552-558). Its normal location is approximately 1.3 kilobase pairs
upstream of the mouse aprt (adenine phosphoribosyltransferase)
gene. To determine if the methylation center could induce inactivation
of the aprt gene, a plasmid construct was created in which the
methylation center was moved next to the aprt promoter.
Transfection experiments demonstrated inactivation of the aprt gene on the hybrid construct. The inactivation event was shown
with a Southern blot analysis to correlate with hypermethylation and to
be reversible by treatment with 2-deoxy-5`-azacytidine, a demethylating
agent. Interestingly, gene inactivation induced by the methylation
center required truncation of the aprt promoter. The results
demonstrate that epigenetic gene inactivation can be induced by a DNA
methylation center.