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Series GSE90704 Query DataSets for GSE90704
Status Public on Dec 01, 2016
Title DNA methylation in the gene body influences MeCP2-mediated gene repression
Organism Mus musculus
Experiment type Genome binding/occupancy profiling by high throughput sequencing
Summary Rett syndrome is a severe neurodevelopmental disorder caused by loss-of-function mutations in the methyl-CpG-binding protein gene, MECP2. MeCP2 is a methyl-cytosine binding protein that is proposed to function as a transcriptional repressor. However, multiple gene expression studies comparing wild-type and MeCP2-deficient neurons have failed to identify gene expression changes consistent with loss of a classical transcriptional repressor. Recent work suggests that one function of MeCP2 in neurons is to temper the expression of the longest genes in the genome by binding to methylated CA dinucleotides (mCA) within transcribed regions of these genes. In the present study, we explore the mechanism of mCA and MeCP2 in fine-tuning the expression of long genes. We find that mCA is not only highly enriched within the body of genes normally repressed by MeCP2, but also enriched within extended megabase-scale regions surrounding MeCP2-repressed genes. While enrichment of mCA exists in a broad region around these genes, mCA within gene bodies appears to be the primary driver of gene repression by MeCP2. Disruption of methylation at CA sites within the brain results in depletion of MeCP2 across genes that normally contain a high density of gene-body mCA. We further find that the degree of gene repression by MeCP2 is proportional to the total number of methylated cytosine MeCP2 binding sites across the body of a gene. These findings suggest a model in which MeCP2 tunes gene expression in neurons by binding within the transcribed regions of genes to impede the elongation of RNA polymerase.
 
Overall design MeCP2 ChIP-seq from the cerebral cortex of Dnmt3a knockout and wild-type mice
 
Contributor(s) Kinde BZ, Wu DY, Greenberg ME, Gabel HW
Citation(s) 27965390
Submission date Nov 30, 2016
Last update date May 15, 2019
Contact name Harrison Wren Gabel
E-mail(s) gabelh@pcg.wustl.edu
Organization name Harvard Medical School
Department Neurbiology
Lab Michael Greenberg
Street address 220 longwood avenue
City brookline
State/province Massachusetts
ZIP/Postal code 02115
Country USA
 
Platforms (1)
GPL19057 Illumina NextSeq 500 (Mus musculus)
Samples (12)
GSM2410967 MeCP2IP_MeCP2_ChIP_DKO1
GSM2410968 INPUT_MeCP2_ChIP_DKO1
GSM2410969 MeCP2IP_MeCP2_ChIP_DKO2
Relations
BioProject PRJNA355566
SRA SRP094122

Download family Format
SOFT formatted family file(s) SOFTHelp
MINiML formatted family file(s) MINiMLHelp
Series Matrix File(s) TXTHelp

Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE90704_GeneLevelChIP.txt.gz 262.1 Kb (ftp)(http) TXT
GSE90704_INPUT_PooledControls.bed.gz 541.2 Mb (ftp)(http) BED
GSE90704_INPUT_PooledDnmt3a_CKOs.bed.gz 541.2 Mb (ftp)(http) BED
GSE90704_MECP2_PooledControls.bed.gz 541.3 Mb (ftp)(http) BED
GSE90704_MECP2_PooledDnmt3a_CKOs.bed.gz 541.3 Mb (ftp)(http) BED
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Processed data are available on Series record

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