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Reversible promoter methylation determines fluctuating expression of acute phase proteins

Shichao Zhang, Mingyu Wang, Jun-Rui Feng, Yue Chang, Shang‐Rong Ji, Yi Wu

2020eLife21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Acute phase reactants (APRs) are secretory proteins exhibiting large expression changes in response to proinflammatory cytokines. Here we show that the expression pattern of a major human APR, that is C-reactive protein (CRP), is casually determined by DNMT3A and TET2-tuned promoter methylation status. CRP features a CpG-poor promoter with its CpG motifs located in binding sites of STAT3, C/EBP-β and NF-κB. These motifs are highly methylated at the resting state, but undergo STAT3- and NF-κB-dependent demethylation upon cytokine stimulation, leading to markedly enhanced recruitment of C/EBP-β that boosts CRP expression. Withdrawal of cytokines, by contrast, results in a rapid recovery of promoter methylation and termination of CRP induction. Further analysis suggests that reversible methylation also regulates the expression of highly inducible genes carrying CpG-poor promoters with APRs as representatives. Therefore, these CpG-poor promoters may evolve CpG-containing TF binding sites to harness dynamic methylation for prompt and reversible responses.

Topics & Concepts

PromoterMethylationCpG siteDNA methylationEpigenetics of physical exerciseBiologyProinflammatory cytokineDemethylationGene expressionRegulation of gene expressionMolecular biologyCell biologyGeneGeneticsImmunologyInflammationEpigenetics and DNA MethylationCancer-related gene regulationNeonatal Respiratory Health Research
Reversible promoter methylation determines fluctuating expression of acute phase proteins | Litcius