TY - JOUR
T1 - Correlation between Shh expression and DNA methylation status of the limb-specific Shh enhancer region during limb regeneration in amphibians
AU - Yakushiji, Nayuta
AU - Suzuki, Makoto
AU - Satoh, Akira
AU - Sagai, Tomoko
AU - Shiroishi, Toshihiko
AU - Kobayashi, Hisato
AU - Sasaki, Hiroyuki
AU - Ide, Hiroyuki
AU - Tamura, Koji
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Dr. K. Takeshima (Nagoya University, Japan) for the kind gifts of plasmids. We also thank Drs. H. Nakamura and Y. Watanabe (Tohoku University, Japan) for the ABI sequence analysis and Dr. M. Kawata (Tohoku University, Japan) for the advice of statistical method. This work was supported by research grants from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan.
PY - 2007/12/1
Y1 - 2007/12/1
N2 - The Xenopus adult limb has very limited regeneration ability, and only a simple cartilaginous spike structure without digits is formed after limb amputation. We found that expression of Shh and its downstream genes is absent from the regenerating blastema of the Xenopus froglet limb. Moreover, we found that a limb enhancer region of the Shh gene is highly methylated in the froglet, although the sequence is hypomethylated in the Xenopus tadpole, which has complete limb regeneration ability. These findings, together with the fact that the promoter region of Shh is hardly methylated in Xenopus, suggest that regenerative failure (deficiency in repatterning) in the Xenopus adult limb is associated with methylation status of the enhancer region of Shh and that a target-specific epigenetic regulation is involved in gene re-activation for repatterning during the Xenopus limb regeneration process. Because the methylation level of the enhancer region was low in other amphibians that have Shh expression in the blastemas, a low methylation status may be the basic condition under which transcriptional regulation of Shh expression can progress during the limb regeneration process. These findings provide the first evidence for a relationship between epigenetic regulation and pattern formation during organ regeneration in vertebrates.
AB - The Xenopus adult limb has very limited regeneration ability, and only a simple cartilaginous spike structure without digits is formed after limb amputation. We found that expression of Shh and its downstream genes is absent from the regenerating blastema of the Xenopus froglet limb. Moreover, we found that a limb enhancer region of the Shh gene is highly methylated in the froglet, although the sequence is hypomethylated in the Xenopus tadpole, which has complete limb regeneration ability. These findings, together with the fact that the promoter region of Shh is hardly methylated in Xenopus, suggest that regenerative failure (deficiency in repatterning) in the Xenopus adult limb is associated with methylation status of the enhancer region of Shh and that a target-specific epigenetic regulation is involved in gene re-activation for repatterning during the Xenopus limb regeneration process. Because the methylation level of the enhancer region was low in other amphibians that have Shh expression in the blastemas, a low methylation status may be the basic condition under which transcriptional regulation of Shh expression can progress during the limb regeneration process. These findings provide the first evidence for a relationship between epigenetic regulation and pattern formation during organ regeneration in vertebrates.
KW - DNA methylation
KW - Limb
KW - MFCS1
KW - Regeneration
KW - Shh
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ydbio.2007.09.022
DO - 10.1016/j.ydbio.2007.09.022
M3 - Article
C2 - 17961537
AN - SCOPUS:36549051746
SN - 0012-1606
VL - 312
SP - 171
EP - 182
JO - Developmental Biology
JF - Developmental Biology
IS - 1
ER -