A Dominant Modifier of Transgene Methylation Is Mapped by QTL Analysis to Mouse Chromosome 13
- Pascale Valenza-Schaerly1,
- Benjamin Pickard2,7,
- Jörn Walter3,
- Martin Jung4,
- Lucille Pourcel5,
- Wolf Reik2,
- Dominique Gauguier6,
- Gilles Vergnaud1, and
- Christine Pourcel5,8
- 1IECH Institut de Génétique et Microbiologie, Université Paris-Sud, 91405 Orsay Cedex, France; 2Laboratory of Developmental Genetics and Imprinting, The Babraham Institute, Cambridge CB2 4AT, UK; 3Max-Planck Institut für Molekulare Genetik, D-14195 Berlin, Germany; 4Mikrosatellitenzentrum, Max-Delbrück-Centrum, D-14059 Berlin, Germany; 5Immuno-Hématologie et Immunopathologie, Institut Pasteur, 75724 Paris, France; 6The Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, Headington, Oxford OX3 7BN, UK
Abstract
The single-copy hepatitis B virus transgene in the E36 transgenic mouse strain undergoes methylation changes in a parent-of-origin, tissue, and strain-specific fashion. In a C57BL/6 background, the paternally transmitted transgene is methylated in 30% of cells, whereas it is methylated in more than 80% of cells in (BALB/c x C57BL/6) F1 mice. We established previously that several genetic factors were likely to contribute to the transgene methylation profile, some with demethylating and some with de novo methylating activities. Using quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping, we have now localized one major modifier locus on chromosome 13 (Mod13), which explains a 30% increase in the methylation level of this transgene with no effect on the flanking endogenous sequences. No other QTL could be identified, except for a demethylating activity of low significance located on chromosome 12. Recombinant inbred mice containing a BALB/c allele of Mod13 were then used to show that the presence of Mod13 is sufficient to induce de novo methylation. A segregation between de novo methylation and repression of transgene expression was uncovered, suggesting that this genetic system is also useful for the identification of factors that interpret methylation patterns in the genome.
Footnotes
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↵7 Present address: MRC Human Genetics Unit, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, UK.
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↵8 Corresponding author.
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E-MAIL cpourcel{at}pasteur.fr; FAX 33 (0) 1456-88951.
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Article and publication are at www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.163801.
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- Received September 5, 2000.
- Accepted January 2, 2001.
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press











