Astrocyte-specific genes are generally demethylated in neural precursor cells prior to astrocytic differentiation.

Epigenetic changes are thought to lead to alterations in the property of cells, such as differentiation potential. Neural precursor cells (NPCs) differentiate only into neurons in the midgestational brain, yet they become able to generate astrocytes in the late stage of development. This differentia...

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Main Authors: Izuho Hatada, Masakazu Namihira, Sumiyo Morita, Mika Kimura, Takuro Horii, Kinichi Nakashima
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2527128?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-1d90c319e3064b50be36c290f15a6b692020-11-24T21:55:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032008-01-0139e318910.1371/journal.pone.0003189Astrocyte-specific genes are generally demethylated in neural precursor cells prior to astrocytic differentiation.Izuho HatadaMasakazu NamihiraSumiyo MoritaMika KimuraTakuro HoriiKinichi NakashimaEpigenetic changes are thought to lead to alterations in the property of cells, such as differentiation potential. Neural precursor cells (NPCs) differentiate only into neurons in the midgestational brain, yet they become able to generate astrocytes in the late stage of development. This differentiation-potential switch could be explained by epigenetic changes, since the promoters of astrocyte-specific marker genes, glial fibrillary acidic protein (Gfap) and S100beta, have been shown to become demethylated in late-stage NPCs prior to the onset of astrocyte differentiation; however, whether demethylation occurs generally in other astrocyctic genes remains unknown. Here we analyzed DNA methylation changes in mouse NPCs between the mid-(E11.5) and late (E14.5) stage of development by a genome-wide DNA methylation profiling method using microarrays and found that many astrocytic genes are demethylated in late-stage NPCs, enabling the cell to become competent to express these genes. Although these genes are already demethylated in late-stage NPCs, they are not expressed until cells differentiate into astrocytes. Thus, late-stage NPCs have epigenetic potential which can be realized in their expression after astrocyte differentiation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2527128?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Izuho Hatada
Masakazu Namihira
Sumiyo Morita
Mika Kimura
Takuro Horii
Kinichi Nakashima
spellingShingle Izuho Hatada
Masakazu Namihira
Sumiyo Morita
Mika Kimura
Takuro Horii
Kinichi Nakashima
Astrocyte-specific genes are generally demethylated in neural precursor cells prior to astrocytic differentiation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Izuho Hatada
Masakazu Namihira
Sumiyo Morita
Mika Kimura
Takuro Horii
Kinichi Nakashima
author_sort Izuho Hatada
title Astrocyte-specific genes are generally demethylated in neural precursor cells prior to astrocytic differentiation.
title_short Astrocyte-specific genes are generally demethylated in neural precursor cells prior to astrocytic differentiation.
title_full Astrocyte-specific genes are generally demethylated in neural precursor cells prior to astrocytic differentiation.
title_fullStr Astrocyte-specific genes are generally demethylated in neural precursor cells prior to astrocytic differentiation.
title_full_unstemmed Astrocyte-specific genes are generally demethylated in neural precursor cells prior to astrocytic differentiation.
title_sort astrocyte-specific genes are generally demethylated in neural precursor cells prior to astrocytic differentiation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2008-01-01
description Epigenetic changes are thought to lead to alterations in the property of cells, such as differentiation potential. Neural precursor cells (NPCs) differentiate only into neurons in the midgestational brain, yet they become able to generate astrocytes in the late stage of development. This differentiation-potential switch could be explained by epigenetic changes, since the promoters of astrocyte-specific marker genes, glial fibrillary acidic protein (Gfap) and S100beta, have been shown to become demethylated in late-stage NPCs prior to the onset of astrocyte differentiation; however, whether demethylation occurs generally in other astrocyctic genes remains unknown. Here we analyzed DNA methylation changes in mouse NPCs between the mid-(E11.5) and late (E14.5) stage of development by a genome-wide DNA methylation profiling method using microarrays and found that many astrocytic genes are demethylated in late-stage NPCs, enabling the cell to become competent to express these genes. Although these genes are already demethylated in late-stage NPCs, they are not expressed until cells differentiate into astrocytes. Thus, late-stage NPCs have epigenetic potential which can be realized in their expression after astrocyte differentiation.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2527128?pdf=render
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AT mikakimura astrocytespecificgenesaregenerallydemethylatedinneuralprecursorcellspriortoastrocyticdifferentiation
AT takurohorii astrocytespecificgenesaregenerallydemethylatedinneuralprecursorcellspriortoastrocyticdifferentiation
AT kinichinakashima astrocytespecificgenesaregenerallydemethylatedinneuralprecursorcellspriortoastrocyticdifferentiation
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