Variations in DNA methylation patterns during the cell cycle of HeLa cells

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Abstract

DNA methylation has been viewed as a stable component of the epigenome, established during development and fixed thereafter. Here we have found that the DNA methylation pattern varies during a single cell cycle, with the global levels of DNA methylation decreased in G1 and increase during S phase. There was little change in the DNA methylation levels in repetitive sequences throughout the cell cycle. However using a human CpG island microarray it was revealed that 174 CG-containing sequences were differentially methylated between G1 and S. Seventy-five percent of all the variations in DNA methylation detected in unique sequences represented hypomethylation at G0, with changes occurring in both CpG islands and non-CpG islands. This is the first demonstration of a dynamic DNA methylation pattern within a single cell cycle of a mature somatic cell. These data are important for our understanding of the stability of DNA methylation patterns in somatic cells. © 2007 Landes Bioscience.

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Brown, S. E., Fraga, M. F., Weaver, I. C. G., Berdasco, M., & Szyf, M. (2007). Variations in DNA methylation patterns during the cell cycle of HeLa cells. Epigenetics, 2(1), 54–65. https://doi.org/10.4161/epi.2.1.3880

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