Differential DNA methylation at conserved non-genic elements and evidence for transgenerational inheritance following developmental exposure to mono(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate and 5-azacytidine in zebrafish
Kamstra, Jorke H.; Sales, Liana Bastos; Aleström, Peter; Legler, Juliette
(2017) Epigenetics and Chromatin, volume 10, issue 1
(Article)
Abstract
Background: Exposure to environmental stressors during development may lead to latent and transgenerational adverse health effects. To understand the role of DNA methylation in these effects, we used zebrafish as a vertebrate model to investigate heritable changes in DNA methylation following chemical-induced stress during early development. We exposed zebrafish embryos
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to non-embryotoxic concentrations of the biologically active phthalate metabolite mono(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (MEHP, 30 μM) and the DNA methyltransferase 1 inhibitor 5-azacytidine (5AC, 10 μM). Direct, latent and transgenerational effects on DNA methylation were assessed using global, genome-wide and locus-specific DNA methylation analyses. Results: Following direct exposure in zebrafish embryos from 0 to 6 days post-fertilization, genome-wide analysis revealed a multitude of differentially methylated regions, strongly enriched at conserved non-genic elements for both compounds. Pathways involved in adipogenesis were enriched with the putative obesogenic compound MEHP. Exposure to 5AC resulted in enrichment of pathways involved in embryonic development and transgenerational effects on larval body length. Locus-specific methylation analysis of 10 differentially methylated sites revealed six of these loci differentially methylated in sperm sampled from adult zebrafish exposed during development to 5AC, and in first and second generation larvae. With MEHP, consistent changes were found at 2 specific loci in first and second generation larvae. Conclusions: Our results suggest a functional role for DNA methylation on cis-regulatory conserved elements following developmental exposure to compounds. Effects on these regions are potentially transferred to subsequent generations.
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Keywords: 5-Azacytidine, DNA methylation, Environmental stress, Epigenetics, Phthalate, Toxicology, Transgenerational, Zebrafish, azacitidine, beta catenin, DNA, DNA methyltransferase 3A, DNA methyltransferase 3B, kruppel like factor 4, octamer transcription factor 4, peroxisome proliferator activated receptor alpha, peroxisome proliferator activated receptor gamma, phthalic acid 2 ethylhexyl monoester, sonic hedgehog protein, transcription factor Gli1, transcription factor PAX6, transcription factor POU4F1, transcription factor Sox2, transcription factor Sox3, transforming growth factor beta, Wnt protein, Wnt7a protein, adipogenesis, animal experiment, animal tissue, article, controlled study, embryo, embryo development, environmental exposure, environmental stress, female, fertilization, gene locus, genetic analysis, genetic conservation, inheritance, larval development, liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, male, next generation sequencing, nonhuman, protein expression, regulatory sequence, zebra fish
ISSN: 1756-8935
Publisher: BioMed Central
(Peer reviewed)