Genomics

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Maintenance DNA methylation in pre-meiotic germ cells regulates meiotic prophase by facilitating homologous chromosome pairing


ABSTRACT: During spermatogenesis, mammalian spermatogonia undergo mitotic division, to maintain stem cell pool via self-renewal and generate differentiating progenitor cells for entry into meiotic prophase. During the perinatal stage, de novo DNA methylation occurring in pro-spermatogonia plays a key role to complete meiotic prophase and initiate meiotic division. In contrast, the role of the maintenance DNA methylation pathway for regulation of meiotic prophase, or meiotic division, in the adult is not well understood. Here, by using conditional mutants for Np95 (nuclear protein 95 kDa, also known as Uhrf1) or Dnmt1 [DNA (cytosine-5)-methyltransferase 1], two proteins that are essential for maintenance DNA methylation, we reveal that both NP95 and DNMT1 are co-expressed in spermatogonia and that these factors are necessary for meiosis in male germ cells. We found that Np95- or Dnmt1-deficient spermatocytes exhibited spermatogenic defects involving synaptic failure during meiotic prophase. In addition, assembly of pericentric heterochromatin clusters in early meiotic prophase, a phenomenon that is required for subsequent pairing of homologous chromosomes, is disrupted in Np95-deficient as well as Dnmt1-deficient spermatocytes. Based on these observations, we propose that DNA methylation established in pre-meiotic spermatogonia regulates synapsis of homologous chromosomes, and in turn quality control of male germ cells. Maintenance DNA methylation, therefore, plays a role to ensure faithful transmission of both genetic and epigenetic information to offspring.

ORGANISM(S): Mus musculus

PROVIDER: GSE169575 | GEO | 2021/04/15

REPOSITORIES: GEO

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