>
Fa   |   Ar   |   En
   Epigenetic memory via concordant DNA methylation is inversely correlated to developmental potential of mammalian cells  
   
نویسنده choi m. ,genereux d.p. ,goodson j. ,al-azzawi h. ,allain s.q. ,simon n. ,palasek s. ,ware c.b. ,cavanaugh c. ,miller d.g. ,johnson w.c. ,sinclair k.d. ,stöger r. ,laird c.d.
منبع plos genetics - 2017 - دوره : 13 - شماره : 11
چکیده    In storing and transmitting epigenetic information,organisms must balance the need to maintain information about past conditions with the capacity to respond to information in their current and future environments. some of this information is encoded by dna methylation,which can be transmitted with variable fidelity from parent to daughter strand. high fidelity confers strong pattern matching between the strands of individual dna molecules and thus pattern stability over rounds of dna replication; lower fidelity confers reduced pattern matching,and thus greater flexibility. here,we present a new conceptual framework,ratio of concordance preference (rcp),that uses double-stranded methylation data to quantify the flexibility and stability of the system that gave rise to a given set of patterns. we find that differentiated mammalian cells operate with high dna methylation stability,consistent with earlier reports. stem cells in culture and in embryos,in contrast,operate with reduced,albeit significant,methylation stability. we conclude that preference for concordant dna methylation is a consistent mode of information transfer,and thus provides epigenetic stability across cell divisions,even in stem cells and those undergoing developmental transitions. broader application of our rcp framework will permit comparison of epigenetic-information systems across cells,developmental stages,and organisms whose methylation machineries differ substantially or are not yet well understood. © 2017 choi et al.
آدرس department of biology,university of washington,seattle,wa,united states,department of computer science,princeton university,princeton,nj,united states,neurosciences phd program,stanford university school of medicine,stanford,ca, United States, broad institute of massachusetts institute of technology and harvard university,cambridge,ma, United States, department of pathology,university of washington school of medicine,seattle,wa, United States, school of biosciences,university of nottingham,sutton bonington campus,loughborough,leicestershire, United Kingdom, department of biology,university of washington,seattle,wa, United States, department of biostatistics,university of washington,seattle,wa, United States, department of mathematics,princeton university,princeton,nj, United States, department of comparative medicine,university of washington school of medicine,seattle,wa,united states,institute for stem cell and regenerative medicine,university of washington,seattle,wa, United States, department of comparative medicine,university of washington school of medicine,seattle,wa,united states,institute for stem cell and regenerative medicine,university of washington,seattle,wa, United States, institute for stem cell and regenerative medicine,university of washington,seattle,wa,united states,department of pediatrics,university of washington school of medicine,seattle,wa, United States, department of biology,carnegie mellon university,pittsburgh,pa, United States, school of biosciences,university of nottingham,sutton bonington campus,loughborough,leicestershire, United Kingdom, school of biosciences,university of nottingham,sutton bonington campus,loughborough,leicestershire, United Kingdom, department of biology,university of washington,seattle,wa,united states,department of genome sciences,university of washington,seattle,wa, United States
 
     
   
Authors
  
 
 

Copyright 2023
Islamic World Science Citation Center
All Rights Reserved