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5-hmC in the brain is abundant in synaptic genes and shows differences at the exon-intron boundary

Authors :
Denise D. Belsham
Benjamin J. Blencowe
Anaies Nazarians
Menghang Xia
Saulius Klimašauskas
Peixin Jia
Manuel Irimia
Shraddha Pai
Mamoru Tochigi
Raymond R. Tice
Mrinal Pal
Carolyn Ptak
Philipp Kapranov
Sun Chong Wang
Edita Kriukiene
Albert H.C. Wong
Zita Liutkeviciute
Solange Moréra
Tarang Khare
Karolis Koncevičius
Arturas Petronis
Viviane Labrie
Rafal Kustra
Source :
Nature structural & molecular biology
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5-hmC), a derivative of 5-methylcytosine (5-mC), is abundant in the brain for unknown reasons. Our goal was to characterize the genomic distribution of 5-hmC and 5-mC in human and mouse tissues. We assayed 5-hmC using glucosylation coupled with restriction enzyme digestion, and interrogation on microarrays. We detected 5-hmC enrichment in genes with synapse-related functions in both human and mouse brain. We also identified substantial tissue-specific differential distributions of these DNA modifications at the exon-intron boundary, in both human and mouse. This boundary change was mainly due to 5-hmC in the brain, but due to 5-mC in non-neural contexts. This pattern was replicated in multiple independent datasets and with single molecule sequencing. Moreover, in human frontal cortex, constitutive exons contained higher levels of 5-hmC, relative to alternatively-spliced exons. Our study suggests a novel role for 5-hmC in RNA splicing and synaptic function in the brain.

Details

ISSN :
15459985
Volume :
19
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature structuralmolecular biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8d979e9ebd8cdb5afb51443a0b68bb53