Pluto Bioinformatics

GSE131377: SPOCD1 is a novel executor of piRNA-directed DNA methylation that links MIWI2 to the de novo DNA methylation machinery

Bulk RNA sequencing

In mammals, the acquisition of the germline from the soma provides the germline with an essential challenge, the necessity to erase and reset genomic methylation. De novo genome methylation re-encodes the epigenome including transposable element (TE) silencing. In the male germline RNA-directed DNA methylation silences young active TEs. The PIWI protein MIWI2 (PIWIL4) and its associated PIWI-interacting RNA (piRNAs) act to tether MIWI2 to nascent TE transcripts and instruct DNA methylation of the active TE. The mechanism by which MIWI2 directs de novo TE methylation is poorly understood but central to the immortality of the germline. Here, we define the interactome of MIWI2 in fetal gonocytes that are undergoing de novo genome methylation and identify a novel MIWI2-associated factor SPOCD1 that is essential for TE silencing. The loss of Spocd1 in mice phenocopies that of Miwi2-deficient mice and does not impact on piRNA biogenesis nor localization of MIWI2 to the nucleus. SPOCD1 is a nuclear protein and its expression is restricted to the period of de novo genome methylation. We found SPOCD1 co-purified in vivo with constituents of several repressive chromatin remodelling complexes (NURD and BAF) as well as DNMT3L and DNMT3A, components of the de novo methylation machinery. We propose a model whereby tethering of MIWI2 to a nascent TE transcript recruits repressive chromatin remodelling activities and the de novo methylation apparatus through its association with SPOCD1. In summary, we have identified a novel and essential executor of mammalian piRNA-directed DNA methylation. SOURCE: Ansgar Zoch (ansgar.zoch@ed.ac.uk) - O'Carroll group University of Edinburgh

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