Category Archives: Project

Annotated Bibliography

 Almén, M. S., Jacobsson, J. A., Moschonis, G., Benedict, C., Chrousos, G. P., Fredriksson, R., & Schiöth, H. B. (2012). Genome wide analysis reveals association of a FTO gene variant with epigenetic changes. Genomics, 99(3), 132-137.

A genome wide DNA methylation profile was used to determine which genes were differentially methylated in carriers of the FTO risk allele (rs9939609). They identified 20 different sites associated with obesity. Overall this paper wasn’t extremely helpful for my project but allowed me to understand the characteristics of the FTO gene and how the risk allele can be mediated by epigenetic changes.

 

 Church, C., Moir, L., McMurray, F., Girard, C., Banks, G. T., Teboul, L., … Cox, R. D. (2010). Overexpression of Fto leads to increased food intake and results in obesity. Nature Genetics, 42(12), 1086–1092.

This study shows how overexpression of the FTO gene leads to increases in body and fat mass regardless of whether they were fed a normal or high fat diet. The increased body mass as primarily the result of increased food intake. This paper was useful in that it sparked my interest in how FTO overexpression resulted in increased obesity risk. They also looked at the effects diet had on the resulting phenotype, which I also based my experiment on.

 

Hess, M. E., Hess, S., Meyer, K. D., Verhagen, L. A., Koch, L., Brönneke, H. S., … & Belgardt, B. F. (2013). The fat mass and obesity associated gene (Fto) regulates activity of the dopaminergic midbrain circuitry. Nature neuroscience, 16(8), 1042-1048.

This paper showed how inactivation of the FTO gene resulted impaired dopamine receptor functions governing the neuronal DA signaling pathway. They compared the genes Drd3, Kcnj6, and Grin1 which are all key regulators of the DA pathway. Results showed that mRNAs had increased m6A methylation and protein expression was attenuated. This paper was extremely important to my experiment as it introduced me to the genes specific to the DA pathway which were affected by epigenetic modifications when FTO expression changed. It also provided me a basis for my experimental design and I ended up basing my methods on the MeRIP-Seq technique they used.

 

Ishii D, Matsuzawa D, Matsuda S, Tomizawa H, Sutoh C, Shimizu E (2014) Methyl Donor-Deficient Diet during Development Can Affect Fear and Anxiety in Adulthood in C57BL/6J Mice. PLoS ONE 9(8): e105750.

Methyl donors, such as folic acid, methionine, and choline are related to one-carbon metabolism and mediate methylation. This study examines the effects of methyl donor deficiency during a developmental period in fear memory acquisition/extinction and anxiety-like behavior. Results showed that methyl donor deficiency caused mice to have an impaired fear memory acquisition and reduced anxiety-like behavior by decreasing the expression of Dnmt3a, Dnmt3b, Grin2b and Gabar2. This paper mainly introduced me to the idea of methyl donor supplementation and helped me formulate my question to incorporate the effects of diet supplementation on RNA epigenetic changes.

 

Jia, G., Fu, Y., & He, C. (2013). Reversible RNA adenosine methylation in biological regulation. Trends in Genetics, 29(2), 108-115.

This paper mainly discusses the m6A RNA modification mechanism associated with regulating cell fate decisions. It helped me understand RNA epigenetics and the furthered my understanding of the mechanism associated with m6A. This proved to be helpful when figuring out how the FTO demethylase altered mRNA methylation levels.

 

McGuinness, D. H., & McGuinness, D. (2014). m 6 a RNA Methylation: The Implications for Health and Disease. Journal of Cancer Science and Clinical Oncology, 1(1), 1.

This paper discussed how m6A modification is a dynamic process and how such modifications can translate into cellular activity. Specifically it suggested how m6A impacted brain systems and was useful for me when I was in the process of relating RNA epigenetics to cellular processes and overall brain functions related to behavior. This helped me tie together key concepts regarding m6A and changes to neuronal pathways in the brain, including DA signaling.

 

Merkestein M, McTaggart JS, Lee S, Kramer HB, McMurray F, Lafond M, et al. (2014) Changes in Gene Expression Associated with FTO Overexpression in Mice. PLoS ONE 9(5): e97162.

Mice expressing two additional copies of the FTO gene (FTO-4) exhibit increased adiposity and are hyperphagic. FTO is a demethylase and targets m6A modification in RNA, which plays a role in regulating gene expression. This study examines the changes in gene expression that occur in FTO-4 mice and suggest that they up-regulate anabolic pathways and down-regulate catabolic pathways. However, no effect of FTO overexpression on m6A methylation of total mRNA was found. This paper mainly provided inspiration for the idea of upregulating FTO expression by expressing additional alleles of the gene. However, it also showed that different genes were epigenetically modified in different tissue types, suggesting FTO regulates a network of obesity related genes.

 

Pogribny IP, Karpf AR, James SR, Melnyk S, Han T, et al. (2008) Epigenetic alterations in the brains of Fisher 344 rats induced by long-term administration of folate/methyl-deficient diet. Brain Res 1237: 25–34.

This paper explained how long term administration of a folate/methyl-deficient diet led to epigenetic changes in the rat brain. This study provided insight on how the availability of methyl donors controls the activity of methyltransferases and demethylases, which inspired me to come up with my specific question.

 

Wardle, J., Llewellyn, C., Sanderson, S., & Plomin, R. (2009). The FTO gene and measured food intake in children. International journal of obesity, 33(1), 42-45.

The paper discusses how polymorphisms in the FTO gene have been linked to sensitivity to satiety in children and eating behavior. This study assisted my early research in discovering the effects the FTO gene had on feeding behavior and obesity risk.

 

Zhao, X., Yang, Y., Sun, B. F., Zhao, Y. L., & Yang, Y. G. (2014). FTO and obesity: mechanisms of association. Current diabetes reports, 14(5), 1-9.

This paper examined how variants of the FTO gene were associated with different disorders including obesity and cancer. It also introduced m6A and FTO’s role in regulating RNA processing. It ultimately summarized the functions and mechanisms of FTO through various studies and highlighted the features linked to obesity. This paper served as the basis for much of my further research regarding m6A and the role that FTO had on RNA epigenetic modifications. It also served as a good summary to tie together the key characteristics of FTO’s functions and mechanisms, which also helped me better understand its role in influencing obesity risk.

Final Project

Final Project Link:   BIOL 463 Final Project- Susan Xu

 

Reflection: 

When starting the final project, all I knew was that I wanted it to be somewhat similar to the question I proposed for the “If I were a Developmental Biologist” assignment. However, narrowing down the question to something specifically testable with one experiment was actually quite difficult and so I relied mainly on my research to direct me to a specific question. Researching was probably the hardest part of the project and reading from one paper to the next forced me to tie together any relevant information and also mentally store important facts for future reference. I then incorporated all my research and used relevant information and insights to formulate my final question.. this of course then led to even more research to assist my specific question. From this project, I learned how to come up with a hypothesis and prediction for my research question and from other papers and studies conducted. This was something I’ve never done before so all these steps that we had to take in designing a research question was new to me. When designing the actual experiment, I learned to select the technique that would specifically measure what I wanted to compare in my results. I also looked at other studies that measured similar things and so mainly got inspiration from those relevant studies. Overall, the project definitely had its ups and downs but I eventually managed to navigate through that and deal with it positively to finish the project! 🙂

Final Project Draft

Introduction

 Obesity is becoming more widespread with global projections of more than 1.12 billion obese individuals by 2030 (Kelly, Yang, Chen, Reynolds, & He, 2008). Excess fat accumulation in obese individuals occurs when energy intake exceeds energy expenditure, where their response to such imbalance is partially governed by genetic predisposition (Herrera, Keildson, & Lindgren, 2011). Twin studies have estimated heritability to account for 40-75% of the phenotypic variance of obesity in children and adults, demonstrating how the occurrence of obesity depends on the interplay of both environmental and genetic factors (Rhee, Phelan, & McCaffery, 2012). In attempts to track down common genetic variants influencing obesity, the Fat mass and obesity associated (FTO) gene was identified by genome-wide association studies (Herrera et al., 2011). Not only were genetic variants of the FTO gene associated with human adiposity and metabolic disorders, they were also linked to cancer (Zhao, Yang, Sun, Zhao, & Yang, 2014). However, the exact molecular mechanism of the effects of the FTO gene on obesity still remains largely unknown (Zhao et al., 2014).

 

Background

FTO expression is highest in areas of the hypothalamus associated with feeding, and have been shown to be linked with sensitivity to satiety in children (Wardle, Llewllyn, Sanderson, & Plomin, 2008). This suggests that the FTO gene may be influencing regulatory drivers underlying food intake (Wardle et al., 2008). The existence of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within the gene may be responsible for an increased risk of obesity in humans since carriers of the FTO rs9939609 risk allele altered food intake, with 505 kJ and 1,231 kJ more in A allele and AA allele carriers than TT homozygotes, respectively (Zhao et al., 2014). Evidence has shown that primary transcripts containing an at-risk A risk allele at SNP rn9939609 are more abundant in blood and fibroblast RNA samples of individuals than those with the T allele (Church et al., 2011). This suggests that increased expression of FTO is correlated with obesity, which was tested in mouse models with additional copies of the Fto gene, resulting in increased fat mass and obesity via hyperphagia (Chuch et al., 2011).

 

The FTO protein is a Fe(II) and 2-oxoglutarate-dependent demethylase of single stranded DNA and RNA, which mainly targets 6-methyladenosine (m6A), 3-methyluracil (m3U) and 3-methylthymidine (m3T) (Merkestein et al., 2014). However, m3T is rare in mammalian genomic DNA, and m3U are deeply buried within folded rRNA, they are unlikely to be the physiological substrates of FTO (Jia et al., 2013). On the other hand, m6A is the most prevalent modification in eukaryotic mRNA and can affect RNA processing, RNA transport, and translation efficiency (Merkestein et al., 2014). Previous studies have shown that m6A levels in the brain are low during embryogenesis but drastically increase by adulthood, indicating that m6A plays a role in neuronal maturation and normal brain functions (McGuinness & McGuinness, 2014). Hess et al. examined the FTO protein’s control over m6A methylation and its critical role in regulating gene transcription and expression of key components in dopamine (DA) signaling in the midbrain (2013). Since FTO only targets a unique subset of mRNAs involved in neuronal function, they measured methylation on Kcnj6, Grin1 and Drd3, of which are all key regulators of DA activity (Hess et al., 2013). In the absence of FTO, mRNAs showed increased methylation and increased expression, whereas protein expression of the gene products was significantly attenuated. However, mRNA and protein expression levels of other hypermethylated mRNAs remained unchanged when FTO was absent, indicating that the effect of m6A on mRNA and protein expression is governed by specific rules or through indirect complex mechanisms (Hess et al., 2013). The studied concluded that FTO influences the translation of specific proteins in the D2R-D3R-GIRK signaling cascade, where the absence of FTO resulted in reduced protein expression which ultimately attenuated D2R and D3R signaling (Hess et al., 2013). Since dopaminergic (DA) signaling governs the control of many complex behaviors including learning, reward behavior, motor functions and feeding, FTO’s enzymatic role in regulating the neuronal pathway of the brain is of specific interest as it could provide insight on FTO’s mechanism in controlling obesity- related feeding behavior.

Increasing amounts of evidence suggest that epigenetic changes that occur on genomic DNA and histone proteins, regulating gene activity and expression patterns during development and beyond, are sensitive to extrinsic factors, such as diet and nutrients (Almén et al., 2012). Studies have shown that long-term administration of a diet lacking in methyl donors, such as folic acid, methionine and choline, caused global DNA hypermethylation in the brain (Pogribny et al., 2008). B-vitamin folate, methionine, betaine and choline are all essential for transfer reactions, which regulates the transfer of methyl groups of methylation reactions (Ishii et al., 2014). Thus, diet-induced epigenetic rearrangement during brain maturation could alter future development and behavior and even influence the onset of various diseases including obesity. Since m6A methylation states on mRNA are dynamically regulated by FTO and methyltransferase activities in response to internal and external cellular cues, is methyl donor supplementation in the diet during a developmental period sufficient to alter m6A methylation levels on mRNA and protein expression of Kcnj6, Grin1 and Drd3 in the brain? Also, does the altered diet induce similar effects in individuals overexpressing FTO?

 

Hypothesis and Prediction

Since RNA methylation involves the transfer of a methyl group similar to DNA methylation, methyl-donor supplementation in the diet during development will likely alter RNA methylation states as well. Thus, supplementation with folate, methionine, betaine and choline will be sufficient in inducing changes in m6A methylation levels on the mRNA transcripts of Kcnj6, Grin1 and Drd3. Since Hess et al. found that FTO-deficient mice displayed hypermethylation of mRNAS of Kcnj6, Grin1 and Drd3 in the brain, FTO overexpression will likely cause hypomethylation (2013). However, FTO-overexpressing mice supplemented with methyl donors should show lower levels of hypomethylation compared to mice provided a diet without supplementation. Increased levels of available methyl groups could drive greater activity of methyltransferases for increased methylation, which would thus counteract the demethylation activity by FTO.

 

Experimental Design

 Mouse Model

 The FTO-overexpression will be induced in mice by globally expressing either one (FTO-3) or two (FTO-4) additional copies of the Fto gene, as done in a study by Church et al. (2010). Wild-type C57BL/6J littermates (FTO-2) will be used as the control, expressing only 2 copies of the Fto gene. An increase in Fto mRNA expression in the brain can be confirmed later by qRT-PCR. The FTO-2, FTO-3 and FTO-4 mice populations will be kept in separate cages in a temperature and humidity controlled room on 12∶12 light-dark cycle with free access to water and food. From each of the 3 genetically different groups, half (n=5) will be fed chow highly supplemented with methyl donors (MS) while the other half supplemented with the mice chow. The MS chow will contain a 2-fold increase in folic acid, vitamin B12, choline and betaine levels relative to the control chow (Wolff, Kodell, Moore, & Cooney, 1998). Mice will be given their assigned diet starting from birth until 5 weeks of age. Previous studies have shown that FTO-4 mice begin increasing in body weight starting at 5 weeks, so mice will be killed by cervical dislocation at this point during development (Merkestein et al., 2014). This control for any methylation changes occurring as a secondary consequence of increased body weight or of other varying external factors (Merkestein et al., 2014). The brain will then be immediately dissected and kept on dry ice (-80°C) until RNA extraction.

 

MeRIP- Seq

Full-length RNA fragments in the brain will be digested to approximately 100nt long fragments following the recommendations of the sequencing platform (Illumina) (Meter et al., 2012). Immunoprecipitation of total mouse brain methylated RNA will be performed using a commercial rabbit antibody to m6A (Meyer et al., 2012). MeRIP-Seq high-throughput sequencing will be performed on replicates of midbrain RNA isolated from FTO-4, FTO-3 and FTO-2 (WT) mice. Genomic alignment will be done using the Burrows-Wheeler Aligner (BWA) and only peaks that reached significance in all replicates for each sample will be used for final peak analysis (Hess et al., 2013).

 

Gene Ontology (GO) Analysis

Peaks will be identified for all samples and the genome coordinates for FTO-4 peaks and FTO-3 peaks will be intersected with FTO-2 peaks to compare and identify any differences in m6A methylation. Specifically, UCSC Genome Browser plots of MeRIP-Seq reads for the Kcnj6, Grin1 and Drd3 genes will be analyzed, since they had been previously identified by GO analysis to regulate the DA signaling pathway (Hess et al., 2013). mRNA levels will also be determined for the three genes by quantitative PCR of all mice samples to compare their relative levels using box plots as done by Hess et al. (2013). GIRK2, GRIN1 and DRD3 protein expression levels in the midbrain tissues will also be compared across the FTO-4, FTO-3, and FTO-2 mice using SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis, utilizing β-actin and calnexin as loading controls (Hess et al., 2013).

 

Discussion and Results

If my hypothesis is correct, mice given the MS diet will show greater levels of m6A hypermethylation of Kcnj6, Grin1 and Drd3 mRNAs relative to the un-supplemented groups. However, such hypermethylation will be to a lesser extent in FTO-overexpressing mice (FTO-4 and FTO-3) compared to FTO control mice (FTO-2) due to FTO demethylation activity. Thus, FTO-4 and FTO-3 mice will also exhibit greater GIRK2, GRIN1 and DRD3 protein expression than FTO-2 from the lesser degree of hypermethylation in both MS and control diet groups. These results would suggest that FTO functions to demethylate the mRNA of genes involved in neuronal DA pathways while increasing protein expression to enhance DA signaling activity. This could explain individuals with the risk allele and mice overexpressing FTO have the tendency to increase feeding behavior resultant from increased DA- associated activity in reward centres of the brain. If methyl donor supplementation increases methylation of DA-related genes, such a result can be useful in the development of nutrient supplementation therapies for decreasing the risk of obesity. However, if methyl supplementation is not sufficient to induce hypermethylation of Kcnj6, Grin1 and Drd3 mRNA, it will not have an affect on protein expression and thus DA reward pathways.

 

 

References

 Almén, M. S., Jacobsson, J. A., Moschonis, G., Benedict, C., Chrousos, G. P., Fredriksson, R., & Schiöth, H. B. (2012). Genome wide analysis reveals association of a FTO gene variant with epigenetic changes. Genomics, 99(3), 132-137.

 Church, C., Moir, L., McMurray, F., Girard, C., Banks, G. T., Teboul, L., … Cox, R. D. (2010). Overexpression of Fto leads to increased food intake and results in obesity. Nature Genetics, 42(12), 1086–1092.

Herrera, B. M., Keildson, S., & Lindgren, C. M. (2011). Genetics and epigenetics of obesity. Maturitas, 69(1), 41–49. http://doi.org/10.1016/j.maturitas.2011.02.018

Hess, M. E., Hess, S., Meyer, K. D., Verhagen, L. A., Koch, L., Brönneke, H. S., … & Belgardt, B. F. (2013). The fat mass and obesity associated gene (Fto) regulates activity of the dopaminergic midbrain circuitry. Nature neuroscience, 16(8), 1042-1048.

Ishii D, Matsuzawa D, Matsuda S, Tomizawa H, Sutoh C, Shimizu E (2014) Methyl Donor-Deficient Diet during Development Can Affect Fear and Anxiety in Adulthood in C57BL/6J Mice. PLoS ONE 9(8): e105750.

Jia, G., Fu, Y., & He, C. (2013). Reversible RNA adenosine methylation in biological regulation. Trends in Genetics, 29(2), 108-115.

Kelly, T., Yang, W., Chen, C. S., Reynolds, K., & He, J. (2008). Global burden of obesity in 2005 and projections to 2030. International journal of obesity, 32(9), 1431-1437.

McGuinness, D. H., & McGuinness, D. (2014). m 6 a RNA Methylation: The Implications for Health and Disease. Journal of Cancer Science and Clinical Oncology, 1(1), 1.

Merkestein M, McTaggart JS, Lee S, Kramer HB, McMurray F, Lafond M, et al. (2014) Changes in Gene Expression Associated with FTO Overexpression in Mice. PLoS ONE 9(5): e97162.

Meyer, K. D., Saletore, Y., Zumbo, P., Elemento, O., Mason, C. E., & Jaffrey, S. R. (2012). Comprehensive analysis of mRNA methylation reveals enrichment in 3′ UTRs and near stop codons. Cell, 149(7), 1635-1646.

Pogribny IP, Karpf AR, James SR, Melnyk S, Han T, et al. (2008) Epigenetic alterations in the brains of Fisher 344 rats induced by long-term administration of folate/methyl-deficient diet. Brain Res 1237: 25–34.

Rhee, K. E., Phelan, S., & McCaffery, J. (2012). Early determinants of obesity: genetic, epigenetic, and in utero influences. International journal of pediatrics, 2012.

Wardle, J., Llewellyn, C., Sanderson, S., & Plomin, R. (2009). The FTO gene and measured food intake in children. International journal of obesity, 33(1), 42-45.

Wolff, G. L., Kodell, R. L., Moore, S. R., & Cooney, C. A. (1998). Maternal epigenetics and methyl supplements affect agouti gene expression in Avy/a mice. The FASEB Journal, 12(11), 949-957.

Zhao, X., Yang, Y., Sun, B. F., Zhao, Y. L., & Yang, Y. G. (2014). FTO and obesity: mechanisms of association. Current diabetes reports, 14(5), 1-9.

Project Outline

Student’s name: Susan Xu

Topic chosen: RNA epigenetics associated with obesity risk

SPECIFIC QUESTION: Is a diet supplemented with methyl donors sufficient to alter RNA methylation changes to attenuate the risk of obesity?

HYPOTHESIS: A methyl donor supplemented diet will increase methylation of mRNA of specific genes associated with the DA pathway involved in feeding and reward behaviour. Increasing methylation at these sites will decrease protein expression and result in reduced feeding behaviour. This will attenuate any effects FTO overexpression has on such loci that increases feeding behaviour and the risk of developing obesity.

 

EVIDENCE ON WHICH THE HYPOTHESIS IS BASED (INCLUDE REFERENCES):

Wardle, J., Llewellyn, C., Sanderson, S., & Plomin, R. (2009). The FTO gene and measured food intake in children. International journal of obesity, 33(1), 42-45.

  • FTO expression in the brain is greatest in the hypothalamus associated with feeding
  • FTO linked to snensitivity to satiety in childrenà so influencing a regulatory driver underlying food intake?
  • Children with two copies of lower-risk alleles ate less than two higher-risk alleles
  • T allele is protective against overeating by internal signals of satiety

Almén, M. S., Jacobsson, J. A., Moschonis, G., Benedict, C., Chrousos, G. P., Fredriksson, R., & Schiöth, H. B. (2012). Genome wide analysis reveals association of a FTO gene variant with epigenetic changes. Genomics, 99(3), 132-137.

  • DNA methylation is sensitive to extrinsic factors such as diets and nutrients
  • A central epigenetic mechanism is methylation of DNA cystosine residues, which may decrease transcription of genes
  • FTO is a demethylation enzyme and may influence the methylation level of other genes
  • It is structurally similar to AlkB family of enzymes that remove methyl groups from DNA residues

Hess, M. E., Hess, S., Meyer, K. D., Verhagen, L. A., Koch, L., Brönneke, H. S., … & Belgardt, B. F. (2013). The fat mass and obesity associated gene (Fto) regulates activity of the dopaminergic midbrain circuitry. Nature neuroscience, 16(8), 1042-1048.

  • inactivation of FTO gene impairs DA pathway functions and behavioral responses
  • increased m6A methylation on subset of mRNAs important for neuronal signaling, including DA pathway
  • FTO regulates the demethylation of specific mRNAs in vivo which relates to the control of DA transmission

 

PREDICTION(S):

Control mice + Normal diet à WT mRNA methylation, Normal feeding behaviour

FTO overexpressing mice + Normal diet à Decreased mRNA methylation, Increased feeding

Control mice + Methyl donor diet à Increased mRNA methylation, Decreased feeding

FTO overexpressing mice + Methyl donor diet à Slight decrease of mRNA methylation, Slight increased feeding

 

EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH TO TEST PREDICTION (INCLUDE ANY DETAILS THAT YOU HAVE WORKED OUT SO FAR):

  • expose mice to methyl-donor diet or control diet for both FTO-overexpressing and WT groups
  • obtain brain tissue after 5 weeks of development

MeRIP- Seq:

  • fragment RNA to 100nt long and immunoprecipitate m6A methylated RNA by using a rabbit antibody to m6A
  • perform high throughput sequencing and use Burrows- Wheeler Aligner (BWA) to align the genome and select for peaks that reach significance

GO Analysis:

  • intersect peaks from FTO-overexpressing group and FTO-normal group to compare similarities and differences of m6A methylation
  • analyse peaks for specific genes involved in DA signalling pathway
  • use quantitative PCR to measure mRNA levels of samples
  • use Western blot analysis to determine protein expression levels of selected DA pathway genes

LIST OF RELEVANT PRIMARY AND REVIEW ARTICLES READ, AND SUMMARY OF RELEVANT INFORMATION FROM EACH (this is the start of an annotated bibliography):

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1046202314002308

  • an overview of MeRIP-Seq protocol

http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0097162#s2

Merkestein M, McTaggart JS, Lee S, Kramer HB, McMurray F, Lafond M, et al. (2014) Changes in Gene Expression Associated with FTO Overexpression in Mice. PLoS ONE 9(5): e97162.

  • Mice expressing two additional copies of the FTO gene (FTO-4) exhibit increased adiposity and are hyperphagic. FTO is a demethylase and targets m6A modification in RNA, which plays a role in regulating gene expression. This study examines the changes in gene expression that occur in FTO-4 mice and suggest that they up-regulate anabolic pathways and down-regulate catabolic pathways. However, no effect of FTO overexpression on m6A methylation of total mRNA was found.

http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0105750

Ishii D, Matsuzawa D, Matsuda S, Tomizawa H, Sutoh C, Shimizu E (2014) Methyl Donor-Deficient Diet during Development Can Affect Fear and Anxiety in Adulthood in C57BL/6J Mice. PLoS ONE 9(8): e105750.

Methyl donors, such as folic acid, methionine, and choline are related to one-carbon metabolism and mediate methylation. This study examines the effects of methyl donor deficiency during a developmental period in fear memory acquisition/extinction and anxiety-like behavior. Results showed that methyl donor deficiency caused mice to have an impaired fear memory acquisition and reduced anxiety-like behavior by decreasing the expression of Dnmt3a, Dnmt3b, Grin2b and Gabar2.

 

HOW DOES THE QUESTION FIT INTO THE BROADER PICTURE, AND WHAT IS ITS IMPACT?

  • certain genes have been identified for increasing the risk for obesity while other factors such as excess gestational weight, diabetes, and smoking can also influence the risk
  • understanding the factors influencing obesity risk can help target certain behaviours and exposures to decrease the prevalence of obesity
  • we can gain more insight on how the FTO can alter gene expression to increase the risk of obesity
  • since supplementing human diets with methyl donors would be difficult to conduct and control, animal studies can provide insight to such epigenetic mechanisms that result

POTENTIAL WAYS TO MAKE YOUR QUESTION KNOWN TO THE PUBLIC AT LARGE (OR TO YOUR NON-BIOLOGIST FAMILY AND FRIENDS):

  • understanding the mechanisms governing obesity risk can help parents and children change certain behaviours and exposure during critical times during development that may modify one’s genetic predisposition