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Publication : Stella safeguards the oocyte methylome by preventing de novo methylation mediated by DNMT1.

First Author  Li Y Year  2018
Journal  Nature Volume  564
Issue  7734 Pages  136-140
PubMed ID  30487604 Mgi Jnum  J:267680
Mgi Id  MGI:6260220 Doi  10.1038/s41586-018-0751-5
Citation  Li Y, et al. (2018) Stella safeguards the oocyte methylome by preventing de novo methylation mediated by DNMT1. Nature 564(7734):136-140
abstractText  Postnatal growth of mammalian oocytes is accompanied by a progressive gain of DNA methylation, which is predominantly mediated by DNMT3A, a de novo DNA methyltransferase(1,2). Unlike the genome of sperm and most somatic cells, the oocyte genome is hypomethylated in transcriptionally inert regions(2-4). However, how such a unique feature of the oocyte methylome is determined and its contribution to the developmental competence of the early embryo remains largely unknown. Here we demonstrate the importance of Stella, a factor essential for female fertility(5-7), in shaping the oocyte methylome in mice. Oocytes that lack Stella acquire excessive DNA methylation at the genome-wide level, including in the promoters of inactive genes. Such aberrant hypermethylation is partially inherited by two-cell-stage embryos and impairs zygotic genome activation. Mechanistically, the loss of Stella leads to ectopic nuclear accumulation of the DNA methylation regulator UHRF1(8,9), which results in the mislocalization of maintenance DNA methyltransferase DNMT1 in the nucleus. Genetic analysis confirmed the primary role of UHRF1 and DNMT1 in generating the aberrant DNA methylome in Stella-deficient oocytes. Stella therefore safeguards the unique oocyte epigenome by preventing aberrant de novo DNA methylation mediated by DNMT1 and UHRF1.
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