First published online July 12, 2005
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.01912
Development 132, 3345-3356 (2005)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2005
DNA methylation controls the timing of astrogliogenesis through regulation of JAK-STAT signaling
Guoping Fan1,2,*,
Keri Martinowich2,3,4,
Mark H. Chin1,
Fei He3,4,
Shaun D. Fouse1,
Leah Hutnick1,
Daisuke Hattori5,
Weihong Ge3,4,
Yin Shen1,
Hao Wu3,4,
Johanna ten Hoeve6,
Ke Shuai5,6 and
Yi E. Sun2,3,4,*
1 Department of Human Genetics, University of California at Los Angeles, 695
Charles Young Drive South, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
2 UCLA MRRC, University of California at Los Angeles, 695 Charles Young Drive
South, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
3 Departments of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, and Psychiatry and
Behavioral Sciences, University of California at Los Angeles, 695 Charles
Young Drive South, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
4 UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute, University of California at Los Angeles, 695
Charles Young Drive South, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
5 Department of Biological Chemistry, University of California at Los Angeles,
695 Charles Young Drive South, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
6 Department of Medicine, University of California at Los Angeles, 695 Charles
Young Drive South, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA

View larger version (73K):
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 1. Precocious astroglial differentiation in
Dnmt1/ CNS in vivo. (A,B)
Immunohistochemistry studies indicate enhanced S100ß- and GFAP-positive
staining in E15.5 (A) and E18.5 (B) cervical spinal cords from littermate
control (con) and Dnmt1/mutant (mut) mice. Bottom
rows show enlargements of the boxed areas in the tops rows. (C,D) Western blot
analysis of GFAP (C) and S100ß (D) proteins in E12-18 spinal cords at
cervical/thoracic level. (E) GFAP immunostaining (red, arrows) of the E18.5
cortical VZ/SVZ in coronal sections (relatively caudal regions) (LV, lateral
ventricle; D/M, dorsal/medial; V/L, ventral/lateral). (F) GFAP immunostaining
of E15.5 hippocampal primordial areas. Scale bar: 157 µm. (G) Western blot
analysis of GFAP protein in E18.5 brain samples. CTX, cortex; CB, cerebellum;
TH, thalamus; STR, striatum; OB, olfactory bulb. Reblotting with an antibody
against ßIII-tubulin serves as an internal control for loading. (H)
Northern analysis of GFAP mRNA in E18.5 whole brain samples. con, control;
mut, Dnmt1/.
|
|

View larger version (91K):
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 2. Precocious astroglial differentiation in methylation-deficient E11.5 and
E15.5 mouse CNS cultures. (A) Wild-type E11.5 mouse cortical precursor cells
from Balb/c wild-type mice were dissociated and cultured for 2 days (2 d), 4
days (4 d) and 7 days (7 d) in the absence (con) and presence of LIF (50
ng/ml). Cells were stained with antibodies against a neuronal marker MAP2
(green) and GFAP (red). (B) E11.5 CNS cells from control (con) and
Dnmt1/ (mut) littermate embryos were
cultured with or without LIF treatment for 2 days, and stained for GFAP (red)
and a neural progenitor marker, nestin (green). Co-localization of nestin and
GFAP (orange) in newly differentiated astrocytes in
Dnmt1/mutant cultures (mut-LIF) indicates
precocious astrocyte differentiation. (C) Western blot analysis of GFAP
protein in two pairs of 3-day-old E11.5 NPC cultures. ß-actin serves as a
sample loading control. (D) S100ß staining (red) of E11.5 CNS cells that
were cultured for 4 days with LIF treatment in the last 2 days. DAPI nuclear
counterstaining (blue) indicates similar cell densities between control (con)
and Dnmt1/ (mut) cultures. (E)
5'-methylcytosine (5'meC) antibody staining (red) of 3-day-old
E11.5 control (con) and Dnmt1/ (mut) NPCs.
Counterstaining with DAPI (blue). The nuclear staining pattern is distinct,
with heterochromatic punctuates intensely positive for 5'meC. (F) NPCs
were infected with a GFP-expressing retrovirus on the first day of culturing.
Two- to 3 days later, the virally infected GFP cells were stained for GFAP or
MAP2, and the percentage of cells differentiating into either neurons or glia
was measured and plotted (n=4). (G) Four-day cultured E15.5 cortical
cells from control (littermate) and Dnmt1/
mice in the presence and absence of LIF, were triple labeled with MAP2
(green), GFAP (red) and DAPI (blue). Scale bar: 32 µm.
|
|

View larger version (43K):
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 3. Enhanced activation of JAK/STAT signaling in hypomethylated NPCs. (A)
Western blot analysis of total STAT1 and pSTAT1 proteins in 1 day (1 D), 4 day
(4 D) and 7 day (7 D) cultured E11.5 wild-type cortical cells with transient
20 minute LIF treatment. (B) Western blot analysis of total and phosphorylated
STAT1/3 protein in 4-day-old cultured control (con) and
Dnmt1/ (mut) E11.5 CNS cells with 20 minutes
LIF treatment. (C) Northern blot analysis of STAT1 and STAT3 mRNA in E18.5 CNS
samples. (D) Western blot analysis of gp130 receptor protein in E18 cortices.
con, control; mut, Dnmt1/.
|
|

View larger version (52K):
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 4. Precocious astroglial differentiation is mediated by enhanced activation of
JAK/STAT signaling in Dnmt1/ NPCs. (A)
Wild-type or a STAT-binding mutant form of the 1.9 kb rat GFAP
promoter-luciferase reporter constructs were co-transfected with the
renilla-TK control plasmid into 3 day cultured E11.5 control and
Dnmt1/ CNS NPC cultures. After 24 hours,
cells were lysed and subjected to dual-luciferase assays (Promega).
*P<0.001 compared with the control group
(Dnmt1+/+) without LIF treatment. **P<0.01
compared with the group of Dnmt1/ cells
without LIF treatment (ANOVA with Post-hoc tests). (B) EMSA assay using a 25
bp unmethylated probe containing the STAT-binding element within the GFAP
promoter with nuclear extracts from cultured control and
Dnmt1/ E11.5 CNS cells as in A. The identity
of the DNA-protein complex (*) was characterized using anti-STAT1 and
anti-STAT3 supershift assays (arrows). (C) Left panel, bFGF expanded
(gliogenic) cortical progenitor cells were left untreated or treated with LIF
for 30 minutes and subjected to chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay
with an antibody against STAT3 (Santa Cruz). A control antibody,
anti-ß-galactosidase, was used to control for ChIP assay specificity. In
the right two panels, ChIP assays were performed on 3-day-old cultured control
(con) and Dnmt1/ (mut) E11.5 CNS cells using
the STAT1 and STAT3 antibodies. (D,E) E11.5 control
Dnmt1+/+ and Dnmt1/ CNS
NPCs were cultured for 48 hours and co-transfected with a
ß-gal-expressing construct and a control plasmid (con) or a
dominant-negative STAT3F plasmid (STAT3F). After another 48 hours, cells were
fixed and double-stained with antibodies against GFAP (green) and ß-gal
(red), and counted for the percentage (mean±s.e.m.) of GFAP and
ß-gal double-positive cells over total ß-gal positive cells.
*P<0.01 compared with the Dnmt1+/+ (con)
group. **P<0.01 compared with the group of
Dnmt1/ cells with ß-gal transfection
(con) (ANOVA with Post-hoc tests).
|
|

View larger version (56K):
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 5. Changes of DNA methylation on the GFAP and STAT1 promoters when NPCs become
gliogenic in control and Dnmt1/ cells. (A)
Bisulfite sequencing analysis on eight CpG sites surrounding the STAT1/3
binding elements within the mouse Gfap promoter. The percentage of
methylation at each of the 8 CpG sites was plotted. (B) Bisulfite sequencing
analysis shows selective demethylation occurs at the 499 CpG site but
not at the 594 CpG site during 24-96 hours of culturing period of
wild-type E11.5 cortical cells. (C) Methylation-specific SNuPE assay was used
to independently quantify the extent of methylation at the single CpG site
lying within the STAT binding element in 1- and 4-day-old cultured E12.5
control (con) and Dnmt1/ (mut) CNS cells and
in E18.5 brain samples in vivo. (D) Bisulfite sequencing analysis of eight CpG
sites within the Stat1 promoter (between 731 bp and 409
bp promoter region of the gene) in E18 control and
Dnmt1/ CNS samples. (E,F). E11 control (con)
or Dnmt1/ (mut) NPCs were transfected with
either a ß-gal expression vector or a CAG-promoter-Dnmt1 expression
plasmid (Chen et al., 2003 )
within the first 24 hours of cell culturing. After an additional 4 days of
culturing in the presence of LIF (50 ng/ml) to promote glial differentiation,
cells were double-labeled with GFAP/ß-gal or GFAP/Dnmt1 (E) and
quantified for the percentage of GFAP+/ß-gal+ or GFAP+/Dnmt1+ cells as
plotted in F. Dnmt1 overexpression cells can be easily detected by the strong
Dnmt1 staining signals (arrows). Two arrowheads in the control culture
indicate the typical nuclear staining pattern of the endogenous Dnmt1 protein.
*P<0.001 compared with control (Dnmt1+/+) with
ß-gal plasmid transfection. **P<0.001 compared with
Dnmt1/ cells with ß-gal plasmid
transfection (ANOVA with Post-hoc tests).
|
|

View larger version (37K):
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 6. Effect of DNA methylation on pSTAT association and activation of the
Gfap, Stat1 and S100ß promoters. (A-E) ChIP assays to
analyze the association of MeCP2 and STAT3 with the Gfap, Stat1 and
S100ß promoters. (F-H) ChIP assays of histone H3 di-methyl
lysine 9 (K9) and di- or tri-methyl lysine 4 (K4) within the Gfap,
Stat1 and S100ß promoters. (I,J) E16 control and
Dnmt1/ cortical tissues were analyzed by
ChIP assays for histone H3 di-methyl lysine 9 (K9) and di- or tri-methyl
lysine 4 (K4) within the Gfap and Stat1 promoters
|
|

View larger version (27K):
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 7. A model for DNA methylation-related glial gene chromatin remodeling during
the switch from neurogenesis to gliogenesis. We have previously demonstrated
that a positive-feedback loop for the JAK-STAT pathway allows for rapid
activation of this pathway once it is derepressed
(He et al., 2005 ). The time it
takes to reach the threshold STAT activity for astroglial differentiation
marks the onset of astrogliogenesis. DNA methylation serves as one of the key
mechanisms blocking activation of the JAK-STAT pathway and glial cell lineage
differentiation during the neurogenic period. Through a process of
developmentally regulated DNA demethylation and active chromatin-remodeling,
the JAK-STAT pathway is induced and astrocytic marker genes become responsive
to STAT signaling, which marks the initiation of astrogliogenesis. In
Dnmt1/ NPCs, hypomethylation leads to
accelerated activation of the JAK-STAT pathway, shortening the time required
to reach the STAT activity threshold for astrocyte differentiation, leading to
precocious astrogliogenesis.
|
|
© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2005