Decoding the Dynamic DNA Hydroxymethylation and Methylation Landscapes in Endodermal Lineage Intermediates during Pancreatic Differentiation of hESC | AIChE

Decoding the Dynamic DNA Hydroxymethylation and Methylation Landscapes in Endodermal Lineage Intermediates during Pancreatic Differentiation of hESC

Authors 

Li, J. - Presenter, Texas A&M University
Zhou, Y., Texas A&M University
Lee, M., Texas A&M University
Guo, L., Texas A&M University
Han, W., Texas A&M University
Liu, S., Texas A&M University
Mo, W., Texas A&M University
Sun, D., Texas A&M University
Xie, R., University of Macau
Huang, Y., Texas A&M University
Dynamic changes in DNA methylation and demethylation reprogram transcriptional outputs to instruct lineage specification during development. Here we applied an integrative epigenomic approach to unveil DNA (hydroxy)methylation dynamics representing major endodermal lineage intermediates during pancreatic differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs). We found that 5- hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) marks genomic regions to be demethylated in the descendent lineage, thus reshaping the DNA methylation landscapes during pancreatic lineage progression. DNA hydroxymethylation is positively correlated with enhancer activities and chromatin accessibility, as well as the selective binding of lineage-specific pioneer transcription factors, during pancreatic differentiation. We further discovered enrichment of hydroxymethylated regions (termed “5hmC-rim”) at the boundaries of large hypomethylated functional genomic regions, including super-enhancer, DNA methylation canyon and broad-H3K4me3 peaks. We speculate that ‘5hmC-rim’ might safeguard low levels of cytosine methylation at these regions. Our comprehensive analysis highlights the importance of dynamic changes of epigenetic landscapes in driving pancreatic differentiation of hESC.