Dnmt3b promotes tumorigenesis in vivo by gene-specific de novo methylation and transcriptional silencing

  1. Heinz G. Linhart1,
  2. Haijiang Lin1,6,
  3. Yasuhiro Yamada2,
  4. Eva Moran1,
  5. Eveline J. Steine1,
  6. Sumita Gokhale1,
  7. Grace Lo3,
  8. Erika Cantu3,
  9. Mathias Ehrich4,
  10. Timothy He5,
  11. Alex Meissner1, and
  12. Rudolf Jaenisch1,3,7
  1. 1 Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research and Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, USA;
  2. 2 Department for Tumor Pathology, Gifu University Graduate School of Medicine, Gifu 501-1194, Japan;
  3. 3 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA;
  4. 4 Sequenom, Inc., San Diego, California 92121, USA;
  5. 5 Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research, Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA

Abstract

Increased methylation of CpG islands and silencing of affected target genes is frequently found in human cancer; however, in vivo the question of causality has only been addressed by loss-of-function studies. To directly evaluate the role and mechanism of de novo methylation in tumor development, we overexpressed the de novo DNA methyltransferases Dnmt3a1 and Dnmt3b1 in ApcMin/+ mice. We found that Dnmt3b1 enhanced the number of colon tumors in ApcMin/+ mice approximately twofold and increased the average size of colonic microadenomas, whereas Dnmt3a1 had no effect. The overexpression of Dnmt3b1 caused loss of imprinting and increased expression of Igf2 as well as methylation and transcriptional silencing of the tumor suppressor genes Sfrp2, Sfrp4, and Sfrp5. Importantly, we found that Dnmt3b1 but not Dnmt3a1 efficiently methylates the same set of genes in tumors and in nontumor tissues, demonstrating that de novo methyltransferases can initiate methylation and silencing of specific genes in phenotypically normal cells. This suggests that DNA methylation patterns in cancer are the result of specific targeting of at least some tumor suppressor genes rather than of random, stochastic methylation followed by clonal selection due to a proliferative advantage caused by tumor suppressor gene silencing.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • 6 Present address: Department of Opthalmology and Visual Sciences, The University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX 77555, USA.

  • 7 Corresponding author.

    7 E-MAIL jaenisch{at}wi.mit.edu; FAX (617) 258-6505.

  • Supplemental material is available at http://www.genesdev.org.

  • Article is online at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.1594007

    • Received July 17, 2007.
    • Accepted October 11, 2007.
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