Published February 15, 2019 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Allele-specific RNA-seq expression profiling of imprinted genes in mouse isogenic pluripotent states

  • 1. Department of Molecular Biology, Faculty of Science, Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences (RIMLS), Radboud University, 6500 HB, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
  • 2. The Anne McLaren Laboratory for Regenerative Medicine, Wellcome Trust- Medical Research Council Cambridge Stem Cell Institute, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB2 0SZ, UK
  • 3. BioTalentum Ltd., Gödöllő, Hungary
  • 4. UMR BDR, INRA, ENVA, Université Paris Saclay, 78350, Jouy en Josas, France
  • 5. Centre for Molecular and Biomolecular Informatics (CMBI), Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences (RIMLS), Radboud University Medical Centre, 6525 GA, Nijmegen, The Netherlands

Description

Background: Genomic imprinting, resulting in parent-of-origin specific gene expression, plays a critical role in mammalian development. Here, we apply allele-specific RNA-seq on isogenic B6D2F1 mice to assay imprinted genes in tissues from early embryonic tissues between E3.5 and E7.25 and in pluripotent cell lines to evaluate maintenance of imprinted gene expression. For the cell lines, we include embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and epiblast stem cells (EpiSCs) derived from fertilized embryos and from embryos obtained after nuclear transfer (NT) or parthenogenetic activation (PGA).

Results: As homozygous genomic regions of PGA-derived cells are not compatible with allele-specific RNA-seq, we developed an RNA-seq-based genotyping strategy allowing identification of informative heterozygous regions. Global analysis shows that proper imprinted gene expression as observed in embryonic tissues is largely lost in the ESC lines included in this study, which mainly consisted of female ESCs. Differentiation of ESC lines to embryoid bodies or NPCs does not restore monoallelic expression of imprinted genes, neither did reprogramming of the serum-cultured ESCs to the pluripotent ground state by the use of 2 kinase inhibitors. Fertilized EpiSC and EpiSC-NT lines largely maintain imprinted gene expression, as did EpiSC-PGA lines that show known paternally expressed genes being silent and known maternally expressed genes consistently showing doubled expression. Notably, two EpiSC-NT lines show aberrant silencing of Rian and Meg3, two critically imprinted genes in mouse iPSCs. With respect to female EpiSC, most of the lines displayed completely skewed X inactivation suggesting a (near) clonal origin.

Conclusions: Altogether, our analysis provides a comprehensive overview of imprinted gene expression in pluripotency and provides a benchmark to allow identification of cell lines that faithfully maintain imprinted gene expression and therefore retain full developmental potential.

Files

13072_2019_259_MOESM2_ESM.pdf

Files (28.2 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:c6489d072669a64d6476dfe899906e6f
12.8 kB Download
md5:2302455206c2f9d5cc4f48228bc7260e
7.4 MB Preview Download
md5:ce7b433dd8859a0b41d4b5dee39bfab8
113.6 kB Download
md5:7552952143f281c629ca82470ed13771
20.9 kB Download
md5:43d5f43a427fbfcf4aedb56384467adb
40.3 kB Download
md5:7c747aad5ea8fbd0f6d745294350edd4
71.0 kB Download
md5:3782e3f28ac91c89c6ec5e176b4fb511
160.1 kB Download
md5:160ab024bbfa9fd72ee8d838cfe40b48
15.3 MB Download
md5:9750ed39d3413399bc541ca89f6def13
5.0 MB Preview Download
md5:c822cde6a30ceb0d54c379803676af4b
23.6 kB Download

Additional details

Funding

PLURISYS – Systems biology approaches to understand cell pluripotency Acronym: PluriSys 223485
European Commission